My original timetable called for
President Obama to retire Admiral Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff (the highest ranking uniformed military commander) on Jan 20
at 12:01 pm -- as quickly as possible after the new president took his
oath of office. I then considered that one must first find a suitable
replacement. President Obama should make it clear that he will not
tolerate military officers publicly denouncing his policies, not to
mention undermining an agreement the United States and the Iraqi
government just worked out of after agonizing negotiations.
Mullen told reporters on November 17 that that the withdrawal must be
driven solely by conditions on the ground, and that the soonest all US
forces could be safely withdrawn from Iraq is "two to three years."
(The next day Mullen indicated that he would carry out any directions
from the new president once he takes office.) Officers like him need to
be reminded of a basic lesson of democracy -- that the military is
there to carry out the civilian authority's orders, not to publicly
pressure the president to follow the Pentagon line.
Wait a moment; I am not saying that if the generals have professional reasons for holding that a given policy or order about to be issued is best not followed, they should keep mum. In such cases, they should surely inform the president of their views, but through meeting with him and his staff, not via the press.
Admiral Mullen's speaking out of turn is especially offensive
because instead of taking his misgivings first to the president, he
went first to the press and the public, calling on the people to oppose
a newly elected president even before he took office.
If the president issues an order that truly violates an officer's
conscience, he should resign. Then he will be free to protest it all he
wants, but not while in uniform. One may say that serving in the
military does not negate one's citizen rights, including freedom of
speech. This is true in all matters but those concerning the military.
Here, the officers' duty is to carry out orders, not to seek to
sabotage them.
Obama would hardly be the first president to be undermined by the generals. President Truman had to fire General MacArthur when he repeatedly publicly disagreed with the president's Korean war policies. Clinton was weakened from day-two of his first term when military leaders let it be known, to one and all, how unwise, and, in effect, dangerous they found his suggested policy on allowing gays to serve in the military. Clinton's timing was surely off, and the policy that was actually implemented is a sort of mind boggling compromise, but that is for the electorate to judge. Nor is there any shortage of voices, from retired generals to Rush Limbaugh to Fox News, expressing contrary views. Thus, there is no danger if the military will keep its place, the issues at hand will not be properly aired.
The overwhelming majority of Americans now think that most anything
that President Bush has done, whether overseas or at home, is
wrong-headed, and they have plenty of reasons to judge him so harshly.
However, regarding the matter at hand, he got it right, and set a good
example: in early 2008, after public statements highly critical of the
President's policies on Iran and Iraq, Admiral William "Fox" Fallon,
the top U.S. military commander in the Middle East, was resigned this
post, ending his military career early.
The fact that President Obama does not have a military pedigree only
enhances the point: he needs to establish early and firmly who is in
charge, and who is to follow orders.
Amitai Etzioni is Professor of International Relations at The George Washington University and author of Security First (Yale, 2007) www.securityfirstbook.com
As the economic downturn continues to hit consumers’ wallets, many predictions that there are more bigger drops of the economy than it had previously thought. Well, everybody believes that the only way out of this is to set up a fair international financial system. The global financial crisis now appears to be the worst in the generations, and a lot of people are wondering if they can get payday loans online. The World Economic Forum met recently in Davos, Switzerland to hold a conference on what to do because of the downturn in the global economy. Payday loans online being the least of their worries, heads of state, economists, and business leaders were all called to take part in the conference. Hopefully a solution can be agreed on. Read more about the economic forum talks and payday loans online at the Money Blog.
Posted by: Payday Loans | January 29, 2009 at 03:00 AM