Closing Gates

Initially I wasn’t too worked up when the news hit that Prez-elect Obama plans to retain Robert Gates as Secretary of Defense. After all, FDR had Republican Henry Stimson in as his Secretary of War, and he did a fine job without undermining the president. Then I thought about what a corrupt mess the whole of the Bush administration has been, and how I wouldn’t want even the slightest bit of this administration contaminated by it in any way. Maybe Gates is a great administrator, maybe not, but the people beneath him are all suspect. Has Gates been secretly suppressing a desire to run the wars Obama’s way rather than Bush’s? I guess we need to hear that… If we don’t, then I worry about what Obama thinks he’s accomplishing here. There’s no value in continuity if you’re continuing something that isn’t working.

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6 Responses to “Closing Gates”

  1. Rob Says:

    While there were other things at play, our military leadership under Gates has appeared to be so much better than it was previously, especially in Iraq. I don’t like the fact that they may be leaving some Neo-cons in there, but I trust Gates, at least temporarily. Some continuity will be helpful as they try to end the occupation of Iraq. That said, I would put him on a very short leash.

  2. Rob in CT Says:

    Gates is a pragmatist and he’s gotten results. Why fire him?

  3. andrew Says:

    Obviously things are working which is why Obama is not going to change much, I’m sure on a few trivial matters he will, but on major issues he won’t. The only thing that will change is how the media writes the narrative because the President will have a D next to his name as opposed to an R. It will be most amusing to watch the media and the Left (aplogies for the redundancy) try to tell themselves that everything is different.

  4. Alex Nixon Says:

    I’m viewing this as the ultimate outsider, being both civilian and Canadian, so I could be wrong, but I’m actually quite thrilled with Robert Gates staying on. He’s recognized the need to shift from conventional warfare to asymetrical warfare, and taken decisive action to change armed forces culture to achieve dominance in that arena (changing promotion boards, scrapping obsolete weapons systems, ect). He seems to listen to intelligent people (Petraeus, Nagl, Yngling, Chiarelli, ect). He is willing to do what it takes to reform the US military, including taking on the air force. He understands how the Washington culture works and has bipartisan support and relationships. He’s tough, and willing to make changes when something isn’t working. He ultimately wants the same thing that President-Elect Obama wants: US troops out of Iraq, without screwing over the entire region.

    Things do change, they just take an inordinate amount of time to do so. Gates seems to be an agent of constructive change. It’s a good day when you can get someone like that on your team.

  5. Shaun P. Says:

    I completely understand your desire for Obama to clean house, Steve. What I keep telling myself is that Gates is more an HW, not a Dubya, guy. I didn’t (and still don’t) agree with a lot of HW’s policies, but with one obvious exception, the folks HW surrounded himself with at least lived in the real world (at least a tad) with the rest of us. That’s more than can be said for Dubya’s crew.

  6. Uila Says:

    Steve,
    I agree with your desire to clean house. I’ve been following Spencer Ackerman’s blog in an attempt to edumacate myself on these things. If there’s been a silver lining thus far, it’s that Gates’ current undersecretary for policy, “former Dick Cheney adviser Eric Edelman“, is out. His replacement is reported to be Michele Flournoy, about whom Ackerman states:

    Long story short, if Flournoy indeed becomes undersecretary for policy — you can read about the importance of that job here — get ready to see, among other things, the interplay of the counterinsurgency and progressive communities as a hallmark of the Obama administration.

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