Submitted to a Candid World


Grrl Power: Thoughts on the New Faces of U.S. Foreign Policy

Hillary Clinton, Susan Rice, Samantha Power … High-profile, not-afraid-to-speak-their-minds, mega-smart women are invading Foggy Bottom under Obama’s watch. How far we have come from my days in middle school when class debates about whether a woman could be president focused on whether a woman could control her emotional ups and downs during her period every month. After all, she could get swept up in a hormonal fit and hysterically “press the button” … Ay-yi-yi!

I am working on a post about Susan Rice. I am reading her papers and speeches delivered during her recent tenure at the Brookings Institution. She is a fascinating woman, and I am truly enjoying learning from her work. I think she will be terrific at the U.N., and I will have more on her and Samantha Power tomorrow.

For this post, I want to focus on Hillary Clinton. In learning about Rice and revisiting Samantha Power, I am reminded of Clinton. Not so much Senator or Presidential Candidate Clinton, but First Lady Clinton: driven, ambitious, fearless, smart as the dickens. Clinton really took one for the team (women in general) as First Lady. She did not fit the image of the loyal wife (though, she has definitely proven she is one), quietly supporting her husband. She certainly seems chastened by her years in the White House, ceaselessly in the sights of Republican and conservative talk-show adversaries.

Her Senate career is notable to me for how careful she had become … with her words and with her positions, especially with respect to foreign policy. Clinton seemed to have over-corrected for her, er, brashness. Once bitten and twice shy, she seemed unwilling to venture outside the safety of the hawkish-side-of-center, lest she be considered a crazed, femi-nazi liberal. Ergo, Hillary, during the primaries, sounded more like John McCain even though I very much believe her views were really much closer to Obama’s.

I don’t think even Clinton bought her position on, for instance, Iran. She seemed like she was trying to fit scorecard criteria of pundits rather than present coherent foreign policy that could adequately correct the Neocon mess in which we find ouselves. This was the primary reason why I could not support her candidacy for the Democratic nomination.

And this is also why I was not thrilled about Obama wanting her for State.

But I have grown more comfortable with the choice, and in researching Rice and Power, I realize now that Obama’s move is extraordinarily inspired. Particularly, Rice’s pragmatic and realistic approach to national security and foreign policy echo Clinton’s strengths. While Clinton has played it safe with her rhetoric, she is still a skilled negotiator and leader in her own right in the Senate.

Ironically, Obama’s appointment of Clinton to State is going to free her to reconnect with the dynamism she originally brought to the national stage. I believe she will thrive as Secretary of State, and the nation will benefit tremendously. I’m not giving much stock to the tittering of pundits, trying to find Obama’s angle: Is he trying to castrate (Ha! Ha!) any future presidential run from Clinton? Is he following the tried and true “Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer” philosophy? Frankly, there are too many pressing issues for our national discourse to revolve around silly, gossipy conspiracy theories.

My gut says that Obama likes having intelligent, powerful, skilled people under his charge. It is to his credit that he can so readily identify and appreciate these qualities in women.


Leave a Comment so far
Leave a comment

Unfortunately another Rice, equally brilliant, was never given the credit she deserved.

Comment by Mike (PC)

condoleeza rice is brilliant, but she is also addled by a blind devotion to neocon righteousness.

Comment by didionsmommy

Rice believes that military action is a legitimate tool in foreign relations. I believe the military was used fairly frequently under our last Democratic president. Should we assume that Clinton will be addled by a ‘blind devotion’ to an interventionist foreign policy circa 1992-2000 ?

Comment by Mike (PC)

There’s some question as to what role Condi ever had in the biggest, baddest Bush admin fiascos: she was cut out of the loop on most of them. I’ll respect her as an intelligent, capable woman, whose talents were sadly overlooked by Bush.

Comment by Ames

p.c. … that is an amazingly disingenuous characterization of neocon foreign policy. feel free to provide evidence supporting the argument that interventionist policy and preventive-war strategy are analogous.

ames, this is a good point about rice, but it is well documented that she is fiercely loyal to bush even to the point of seemingly contradicting her own positions.

here is a quote i found from a rice paper in foriegn affairs (jan/feb 2000) … rice is quoted by (susan) rice in a policy paper discussing bush’s precedent-setting policy of using preventive war against “rogue states” …

“These [rogue] regimes are living on borrowed time, so there need be no sense of panic about them. Rather, the first line of defense should be a clear and classical statement of deterrence—if they do acquire WMD, their weapons will be unusable because any attempt to use them will bring national obliteration.”

rice, herself, was on board with deterrence (and diplomacy, for that matter), but the bush admin’s neocon philosophy pushed prevention to center stage … and the rest is history …

Comment by didionsmommy

Is no longer possible for PC to appear on a page without a fight breaking out? I remember the conversations being more friendly before the last couple months of the election.

Comment by Radioactive afikomen

Actually, I get the impression that of anyone in the Bush administration, Secy. Rice is viewed most favorably by the American public. Secy. Gates also seems to have high positives, but relatively speaking he tends to blend into the background.

Comment by James F

DM, your position seems to be that Rice, despite her brilliance, should be discounted because she is a neocon lapdog. I’m just raising the possibility that Clinton’s devotion to her husband’s interventionalist foreign policy may interfere with her ability to successfully pursue the goals of an Obama administration with notably different goals.

Comment by Mike (PC)

RA – That’s not a fight. That’s a polite disagreement. DM and I haven’t called really thrown down in awhile. Mostly because she’s a big chicken and fears my brilliance ;-)

Comment by Mike (PC)

ha! p.c., thanks! … i needed a good laugh!

(it is true we haven’t gone at each other in, gosh, weeks? i hope it’s not age (!!!) that is mellowing us …)

***
i’m not discounting condoleeza rice at all. actually, i think she makes for quite a tragic figure. what i do not have any tolerance for is roundabout attempts to rationalize neocon policy or deflect scrutiny from the fact that the main tenet of necon phil.: preventive war.

Comment by didionsmommy

I’m not ‘deflecting scrutiny’. Neocon foreign policy is well-documented. But I would also argue that liberals have pursued plenty of ‘preventative wars’ in the past. American intervention in the Balkans was rationalized at least partially on the possibility that it could spill over into Western Europe.

I also recall a heavily protested air war over Iraq during the Clinton administration that was aimed at bending them to the will of the UN (and America). While it didn’t have the cache of ground troops marching in, war is war.

And even our humanitarian wars have lead to tragedy, least we remember Somalia?

How do we know that Hillary won’t be pushing for those kinds of things under Obama?

Comment by Mike (PC)

While it certainly is true that both republican and democratic administrations in the past were certainly no strangers to military intervention when it suited there means Clinton’s military actions focused on limited engagement to effect pressure against an uncooperative regime with ideally minimal collateral damage. Bush’s war was about tearing down Iraq’s military and political infrastructure and rebuilding from the ground up. PC, you are intentionally ignoring the very obvious difference in scale and intent and implying that in placing Hillary as secretary of state Obama with be more predisposed to further military adventurism despite the fact that that is simply not possible with our current engagements. This is not the 90′s when sending a few warplanes and troops somewhere for a few months was easy and cheap and Obama is not Bill Clinton, the man will make his own decisions.

Comment by Jello

The point is that Hillary is a realist hawk on the use of the military. Personally I like that, but I think it’s also worth noting that she is closer to Rice in her philosophy than not. I’m convinced that Obama is in the realist camp as well, though it remains to be seen how that will translate to policy.

Comment by Mike (PC)




Leave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>