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Hillary Clinton and my unrivaled, teeming perplexity

THE FIFTH COLUMNIST by P.M. Carpenter

I'll begin by saying that I find Barack Obama's apparent choice of Hillary Clinton as his secretary of state to be utterly incomprehensible.

The decision may not rise to the full, synergistic level of a "ludicrous embarrassment," as Christopher Hitchens so robustly denounced it the other day, but that's not to say it's absent of both ludicrous and embarrassing elements.

What was Obama thinking? I have no idea. And I'm far from alone.

The editor of the American Prospect, Robert Kuttner, was so bewildered on "Hardball" the other night (the topic is actually more suited to Keith Olbermann's "Oddball") that he trailed off into a despair that sounded a lot like the 1824 Adams-Clay "Corrupt Bargain" controversy.

Is that what he was suggesting? asked Chris Matthews -- an illegal, quid-pro-quo job promise made in June? Oh no, said Kuttner, he just couldn't think of any other reason why Obama would now offer it.

In print, we've witnessed a virtual avalanche of stupefaction in which even the stodgy guardians of conventional wisdom are once again making sense. That's scary. But many of these critical intoners have covered more secretaries of state than most of us can even remember by name.

The Washington Post's David Ignatius, for example, says the rumored appointment would be a "self-inflicted wound," and largely for the same reason proffered by his colleague, David Broder: "Clinton is immensely talented," writes Ignatius, "but it could be the wrong job for her since it has the potential to undermine Obama's own transformational role in foreign policy."

That -- transformation, otherwise known as change -- was what so many Americans, who've grown so tired of our Groundhog Day foreign policy -- were hoping for. Says Broder: "One of the principal reasons [Obama] was elected was that, relying on his instincts, he came to the correct conclusion that war with Iraq was not in America's interest. He was more right about that than most of us in Washington, including Hillary Clinton."

Broder summarized his thoughts in his column's opening paragraph: The whole idea of a secretarial Hillary is, simply, a "mistake."

Moving over to the Times, Thomas Friedman is panicking over the more practical, day-to-day can of worms that he -- and millions of others -- justifiably envisions. "With Mrs. Clinton always thinking four to eight years ahead … every word that is said between [her and Obama] in public, and every leak, will be scrutinized for what it means politically."

In this contemporary age that demands the very trickiest diplomacy, do we really need that … that … distraction? Does it not taint the considered resolution of global problems with the rather seedy circus of domestic politics? Is there no one else, without political ambitions, available? For that matter, is there no one else with actual foreign policy experience available?

Well, we hear, it's all about assembling a "team of rivals" -- an Obamian notion that perhaps took Doris Goodwin's hagiographic manuscript a bit too far. I've read it, as the entire cosmos has by now, and what I took from it was more a thoughtful, intimate portrait of Lincoln the man than Lincoln the manager.

For as historian Matthew Pinsker noted the other day in the Los Angeles Times, "Lincoln's Cabinet was no team. His rivals proved to be uneven as subordinates. Some were capable despite their personal disloyalty, yet others were simply disastrous. Lincoln was a political genius, but his model for Cabinet-building should stand more as a cautionary tale than as a leadership manual."

Indeed, "out of the four leading vote-getters for the 1860 Republican presidential nomination whom Lincoln placed on his original team, three left during his first term -- one in disgrace, one in defiance and one in disgust."

The betting pool is open. Take your pick, ladies and gentlemen: Which will it be for Hillary?

Having said all that, however, I end not in the same place that I opened.

For sure, I still find Obama's choice of Mrs. Clinton an absolutely incomprehensible one -- and the few reasons given above are but selections from the Greatest Hits of incomprehensibility. But -- and it's an immense but -- I'm also a profoundly confirmed believer in the proposition that every president-elect should be free to assemble whatever team he fancies -- right down to now-forbidden, Kennedyesque fraternal appointments -- for whatever reasons (some of which we likely don't know), under the least possible sniper fire.

We elect him and his judgment, not a secretary of state, so let's leave it at that -- although there's no prohibition against crossing one's fingers.

 

Please respond to P.M.'s commentary by leaving comments below and sharing them with the BuzzFlash community. For personal questions or comments you can contact him at fifthcolumnistmail@gmail.com

THE FIFTH COLUMNIST by P.M. Carpenter




An old drama for the new political season...

Here's an Irish Toast for Obama to consider,

May you have the hindsight to know where you've been,
The foresight to know where you're going; and
The insight to know when you've gone too far!

She is a disaster waiting to happen.

I do not trust her at all. She sells out too easily. Consider how quickly she joined that "vast right wing conspiracy" in order to gain the support of Scaife, Murdock and their ilk.

"Leaks" from the Clinton camp seemingly designed to force Obama's hand are typical Clintonian tactics. That is not the hallmark of any team player.

And what she stands for must be determined from her record -- of cooperating completely with thje Bush program in the Middle East.

Not at all the CHANGE we need, want, and voted for!

She "joined the 'vast right wing conspiracy' in order to ...

... gain the support of Scaife, Murdock (sic) and their ilk"? Because she agreed to an interview she's now a member of the VRWC?

Wow .....

I guess Obama is a member, too, huh? Because he had a secret meeting with Fox/Roger Ailes/Rupert Murdoch that wasn't disclosed until September. He then, of course followed up with an interview on Bill O'Reilly's show. What's particularly funny is, when she did the interview with Scaife, Buzzflash (aka Mark Karlin) said …"(T)here's no better friend than Richard Mellon Scaife. It's the next best thing to shouting it out on the Bill O'Reilly show we guess."

Yep ........ almost as bad as going on O'Reilly.

So which is it, John? Is Obama a member of the "vast right wing conspiracy", or are they both just politicians trying to get their message out?

BTW - In terms of leaking, you are aware that Andrea Mitchell (who originally broke the story of HC as SOS) - confirmed by Olbermann - cited two Obama advisors as the source of the story, right?

I dislike Hillary ...

... in almost every aspect of her persona and policies, but I do believe that she would be a good Secratery of State for Obama and America ......... if she or any sane person really wants that job in a post-dubya world?

Democrats HUGELY favor Hillary Clinton as SOS

"Incomprehensible" to you, huh, PM? The reason is simple ..... it's the CDS. You can't comprehend something this simple because you're not a journalist ........ you're just a Clinton-hating whackjob.

Hey ......... I wonder if the American people can comprehend the idea of Hillary as SOS?

Well ........ waddaya know. The American people not only understand it, but they like the idea of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State by 2-to-1 .... and this includes all the right-wing nuts (and you) who hate her. If you exclude Republicans, Independents and Democrats want Hillary as Secretary of State by 57-27 and 79-12 percent.

Democrats LOVE the idea of Hillary as SOS

Wow, PM ....... looks like you and all the other Clinton-haters are riding the small bus.

I would give her a chance

For one thing there is no chance of buyers remorse. If Ms Clinton makes important waves or a horrid move the bus to throw her under is right behind her, not four years away.

And by firing her Barak could come out clean even if he was the lead going in. They can also play good cop bad cop in the same way particularly in the Israeli debacle where I believe Hillary would get more from the Israelis than someone without the long personal connections.

What I understand less is why Hillary would take the job. As a senator she could stay there virtually forever (unfortunately) and build an important legacy particularly redeeming her swiftboating on the healthcare thing, while a Secretary of state job would be over at four years at best, and unless she got a Israeli-Palestinian peace treaty that lasted or something close would not have as much consequence, and even that would have to be a shared success with Obama.

If the Gang Of Pirates think that the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat, only a fool would think it bipartisan to accommodate them.