Clinton’s
National Security Advisers Are a “Who’s Who” of the
Warfare State
By Zaid Jilani, Alex Emmons, Naomi LaChance
September 10,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
-
Hillary
Clinton is
meeting on Friday with a new
national security “working group” that is filled
with an elite “who’s who” of the military-industrial
complex and the security deep state.
The list of
key advisers — which includes the general who
executed the troop surge in Iraq and a former Bush
homeland security chief turned terror profiteer — is
a strong indicator that Clinton’s national security
policy will not threaten the post-9/11
national-security status quo that includes active
use of military power abroad and heightened security
measures at home.
It’s a
story we’ve seen before in President Obama’s early
appointments. In retrospect, analysts have pointed
to the
continuity in national security and intelligence
advisers as an early sign that despite his
campaign rhetoric Obama would end up building on —
rather than tearing down — the often-extralegal,
Bush-Cheney counterterror regime. For instance,
while Obama
promised in 2008 to reform the NSA, its director
was kept on and its reach continued
to grow.
Obama’s
most fateful decision may have been choosing former
National Counterterrorism Center Director John
Brennan to be national security adviser, despite
Brennan’s support of Bush’s torture program.
Brennan would go on to run the president’s drone
program, lead the CIA, fight the Senate’s torture
investigation, and then
lie about searching Senate computers.
That
backdrop is what makes Clinton’s new list of
advisers so significant.
It includes
Gen. David Petraeus, the major architect of the 2007
Iraq War troop surge, which brought
30,000 more troops to Iraq. Picking him
indicates at partiality to combative ideology. It
also represents a return to good standing for the
general after he pled guilty to leaking notebooks
full of classified information to his lover, Paula
Broadwell, and got off with
two years of probation and a fine. Petraeus
currently works at the investment firm KKR & Co.
Another
notable member of Clinton’s group is Michael
Chertoff, a hardliner
who served as President George W. Bush’s last
secretary of the Department of Homeland Security,
and who since leaving government in 2009 has helmed
a corporate consulting firm called the Chertoff
Group that promotes security-industry priorities.
For example, in 2010, he gave dozens of media
interviews touting full-body scanners at airports while
his firm was employed by a company that produced
body scanning machines. His firm
also employs a number of other ex-security state
officials, such as former CIA and NSA Director
Michael Hayden. It does not disclose a complete list
of its clients — all of whom now have a line of
access to Clinton.
Many others
on the list are open advocates of military
escalation overseas. Mike Morell, the former acting
director of the CIA, endorsed Clinton last month in
a New York Times opinion
piece that accused Trump of being an “unwitting
agent of the Russian Federation.” The Times was
criticized for not disclosing his current employment
by Beacon Global Strategies, a politically powerful
national-security consulting firm with strong
links to Clinton. Three days later, Morell told
Charlie Rose in a PBS
interview that the CIA should actively
assassinate Russians and Iranians in Syria.
During his
time at the CIA, Morell was connected to some of the
worst scandals and intelligence failures of the Bush
administration. In his book, he apologizes
for giving flawed intelligence to Colin Powell about
Iraq’s supposed weapons of mass destruction, but
defends the CIA torture program as legal and
ethical.
Jim
Stavridis, a former NATO supreme allied commander
Europe on Clinton’s advisory group, told
Fox News Radio in July, when he was being vetted by
Clinton as a possible vice presidential nominee,
that “we have got to get more aggressive going into
Syria and Iraq and go after [ISIS] because if we
don’t they’re going to come to us. It’s a pretty
simple equation.” He said he would “encourage the
president to take a more aggressive stance against
Iran, to increase our military forces in Iraq and
Syria, and to confront Vladmir Putin” over his moves
in Crimea.
The New
York Times
reported in 2011 that Michael Vickers, a former
Pentagon official on Clinton’s new list, led the use
of drone strikes. He would grin and tell his
colleagues at meetings, “I just want to kill those
guys.”
Others on
the list played a role in the targeted killing
policies of the Obama administration, including
Chris Fussell, a top aide to Gen. Stanley
McChrystal, and now a partner with him at his
lucrative consulting firm, the
McChrystal Group.
Fussell was
aide-de-camp to McChrystal while he was serving as
commander of Joint Special Operations Command.
McChrystal oversaw a dramatic expansion in the use
of night raids and assassinations, and would later
be accused
of condoning torture at JSOC’s Iraq Base, Camp
NAMA (code for Nasty-Ass Military Area).
Richard Fontaine, a former McCain adviser and
president of the counterinsurgency-focused think
tank Center for a New American Security, responded
to the Paris attacks by writing an
op-ed that advocated, among other things, a
U.S.-backed “safe zone” in Syria. He
has also
proposed
intensifying the bombing campaign against ISIS, and
increasing the presence of U.S. special forces in
Iraq.
Janet
Napolitano, a former Obama DHS secretary, presided
over a harsh immigration policy, where the
department
deported
a record number of undocumented immigrants —
although she did
support Obama’s recent executive actions
designed to protect some migrants.
The closest
thing the list has to a dissenter to the status quo
would appear to be Kathleen Hicks, a think tanker
who served in the Obama Defense Department. On a
panel at the Charles Koch Institute with John
Mearsheimer earlier this year, she denounced
American military overreach. “A big footprint in the
Middle East is not helpful to the United States,
politically, militarily, or otherwise,” she
said.
Despite the
heavy relevance of the region to U.S. foreign
policy, only one adviser, former DHS official
Juliette Kayyem, is a (non-Muslim) Arab American.
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