I've been holding off on even a tentative verdict regarding the transition from the lame-duck Bush to the incoming hope-duck Obama administration. Partly because I just don't know. Partly because I'm remaining cautiously optimistic. Partly because I feel like I'm cursed and that my cynicism and skepticism, coupled with my hope and pride, if made public, might just jinx everything and ruin Obama's presidency. Okay, I've obviously just been watching way too much Twin Peaks lately.
But this recent front page diary about Obama's pick for National Security Advisor by Chris Bowers over at Open Left just screams for my attention.
Oh yes, there is more.
I've been holding off on even a tentative verdict regarding the transition from the lame-duck Bush to the incoming hope-duck Obama administration. Partly because I just don't know. Partly because I'm remaining cautiously optimistic. Partly because I feel like I'm cursed and that my cynicism and skepticism, coupled with my hope and pride, if made public, might just jinx everything and ruin Obama's presidency. Okay, I've obviously just been watching way too much Twin Peaks lately.
(And by "watching" I mean obsessively and consecutively beaming the entire series into my skull. And by "lately" I mean in the past three days. And by "too much" I mean not nearly enough because, honestly, Twin Peaks was a watershed moment/phenom in television and American history and in a just world ABC would still be airing new episodes once a week and showcasing the best and most unique in television writing, production, directing and acting. Oh well.)
And, partly because the Sky has been Falling for so many on the left that I just really couldn't get with the chorus of naysayers. Not because those sounding the alarms on the left are Chicken Littles and wrong about Obama being Clinton Redux - I've had the same fear - but just because homogeneity is just not my thing and always induces illustrious yawns. (At least I think they look illustrious.)
But this recent front page diary about Obama's pick for National Security Advisor by Chris Bowers over at Open Left just screams for my attention.
In the diary, which relies on CNN's reporting, Chris bemoans the likely appointment of General Jim Jones because he is not a progressive. He then goes on to note that no one else on Obama's national security team is progressive either. And with names like Biden, Clinton, Napolitano and Gates (ugh) it's not hard to get a bit frustrated. As Chris makes clear he is.
And, honestly, I'm frustrated too.
It would be great if Obama were to stock his cabinet full of progressives. It would be more than great. It would be fantastic. It would be bold and daring and worthy of the mantra of Change. It would also pretty much fly in the face of how he ran the (largely under the radar) national security aspect of his campaign.
It was clear from very early on that Obama was not a genuine progressive when it came to national security issues. Whatever "genuine progressive" means. (I'll return to this later.) Of course this has always been vague and is probably due to a lack of progressives ever being in such positions in the first place.
What Obama was crystal clear about was that he was not opposed to war but "dumb wars" and that his opposition to the Iraq War was based on his opinion of it as being dumb. Which it was.
It was clear early on that Obama's foreign policy would look something like Bush 41's. Which, honestly, wasn't marked by many, if any, setbacks or screw ups. Yeah, the first Gulf War was an imperial adventure but at least we won. And we had full international support (basically) which was, quite bizarrely, the linchpin for many opponents of the second Gulf War. And it was the (Clinton-era) sanctions that really screwed Iraq.
Obama also made it clear, very early on, that he was serious about the Middle East peace process and that he was not going to be a canvass on which AIPAC and the ADL would be free to paint to their hearts' content. In fact, he enjoyed a miniature scandal or two by mentioning (correctly) that the Palestinians were the ones suffering most of all in the conflict and by (again, correctly) not identifying Israel as one of the United States' top three allies in response to the Israel Question at an early debate.
What does this all have to do with Jim Jones?
The guy is actually reasonable when it comes to the Israel-Palestine conflict.
And the rabidly pro-Israel brigades in their dank corners of the Internets seem to really hate and fear the guy for this very reason.
Which brings me to a question that I kind of posed earlier on:
What does a progressive foreign policy really like in regards to national security?
I don't ask this to be a jerk or to question beg or because I think I have the complete answer and certainly not to get Chris' (one of my favorite bloggers) goat.
I ask because I really am not too sure about what sane and pragmatic progressives would do in such positions. Ending the war in Iraq seems like one. Direct diplomacy with non-allied nations would seem to be another. Cutting down on the saber-rattling would have to be key--and really just common sense. Those all seem to be covered. We might even get a direct presence in Sudan to stop the genocide. That would be nice.
But how about Mid East peace? At least an honest and hearty attempt? Not the handshakes and masquerades that AIPAC and Likud's favorite president, Bush, gave to the Israelis, Palestinians and foreign press. But an actual change. How about an actual, good old fashioned, college try? Even if the college in question is West Point...
That would have to factor in. Wouldn't it?
The answer is, of course, Yes. Of course.
Unfortunately, when it has come to mainstream figures making sense and acting equitable and just about the Israel-Palestine issue, most of them have been conservatives or centrists. This is assuredly mostly the frothingly pro-Israel media's fault and also a problem within the institutions that govern themselves.
It's hard enough to be an unabashed progressive in the United States and expect to be taken seriously. If you're considered to be anywhere slightly close to pro-Palestinian or even neutral andeven-handed then you are considered unserious and probably a little crazy, depending on how far you backpedal once The Lobby gets into action.
So, we have people like Pat Buchanan and Jim Jones and even George H.W. Bush who make some amount of sense on this issue but who are decidedly not progressives. And then we've got ultra-progressives like Robert Wexler and John Conyers and Russ Feingold who tend to, at best, roll over when it comes to the issue.
Wes Clark seems to be the exception to prove the rule. But then again he was a Republican until 2004. Though he is a progressive now. It's murky but I think my argument pretty much holds though this does get into tendentious territory. (And honestly, the lack of consideration that Clark has received by the Obama camp is probably one of the most frustrating things of all.)
So, faced with the prospect of respected (blah, I know) establishment (double blah) figures who are not likely to face much scrutiny from the pro-Israel press or the cowed congress and who might stir things up a bit and be a net benefit to the cause of Mid East peace but who happen to be center-right or bipartisan at best or the usual chickenshit Democrats who fall over themselves to fawn over AIPAC and the rest of the Lobby I think the choice is pretty clear.
At least if the Middle East peace process is considered a focal point for the incoming administration. Which I think it is.
I could be dead wrong. But that's how it seems to be shaking out at the moment.
Yes, it seems like everyone in national security positions in Obama's cabinet got the most important national security question of this generation (so far) wrong at the offset. But then again Obama didn't. And he is the boss....
Yes, it would be a lot better if this stupid "team of rivals" garbage that makes beltway gasbags cream in their pants got put to rest. It's so 19th century and Obama is supposed to be our first real 21st century president. But then again there is some merit to the idea. Though at least one token progressive in national security would be quite a bit more responsible and reassuring...
So, while Obama's national security cabinet doesn't particularly inspire hope and change and usher in images of limitless fields of blue cotton candy, the Jones pick is not likely to induce ulcers in my mind's stomach.
Cross-posted at Justice Addict. And Open Left.