The BlogJones "Tees Up"...and Whiffs2:43 PM, Dec 6, 2009
• By MICHAEL GOLDFARB
From the very beginning, the Obama White House has been obsessed with the process by which national security decisions are made -- and with getting the press to treat that obsession as evidence that this White House is somehow more serious about national security decisions than its predecessor. Look no further than the Washington Post's credulous reporting last February on the changes Jim Jones planned to the structure of the NSC, a "sweeping overhaul" that would include nothing less than having the map "redrawn to ensure that all departments and agencies take the same regional approach to the world." Jones would make sure that every decision was properly "teed up" for the president. In June, Jones told Jim Lehrer that "my goal is to make sure that the president is well served, that the issues are properly debated and teed up, that the right people are at the table, that everybody gets a chance to say what he or she thinks about the issue, and then when the president makes a decision that we implement it." Likewise, Jones told CNN's John King in October that any changes to the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy would be "teed up appropriately" for the president. Get it? Jim Jones makes sure serious decisions get teed up appropriately. In their ongoing effort to sell the four-month process (rather than the decision itself) that led to the president's decision to surge forces into Afghanistan, the White House shopped an account of the tick-tock to three national papers -- the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, and the New York Times -- "each of which," Mike Allen says, "amplifies the West Wing's desired storyline: A smart, probing president cuts through the fog of competing visions to come up with his own unique version of a surge." But if we can just focus on the fog for a minute... If this four month policy review was properly "teed up" for the president and the other principals (McChrystal, Petraeus, Gates, Clinton, Mullen, etc.), how could this have happened:
Either Jones forgot what McChrystal's orders were -- and it was Jones and his staff that wrote those orders -- or three months after giving McChrystal his mission, the staff at the NSC had changed their minds and simply failed to inform the commander on the ground of his new, far less ambitious, objective. So the White House process failed to make clear to the principals just whom we were supposed to be fighting; isn't that a pretty damning indictment of Jim Jones's role in all of this? |
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