Bolton leaves the National Security Council in ruins | Daily News

Bolton leaves the National Security Council in ruins

Then-U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton (R).
Then-U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton (R).

The former Trumpadvisor helped trash the institution—but the process began long before he was hired.

Heather Hurlburt

After his spectacular firing on Tuesday, former U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton is getting credit—if that’s the word—for taking the entire decision-making structure of U.S. national security policy down with him. “The NSC [National Security Council] is no more, there is no process,” a former White House official told New Yorker reporter Susan Glasser.

Earlier this year, Glasser’s colleague Dexter Filkins documented the decline of the process, which his interlocutors also blamed on Bolton, talking of chaos, a completely broken down system, and a total lack of priorities.

Principals’ meetings—crucial gatherings involving the President, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the heads of intelligence agencies—have become rare. “I don’t remember the last time there was a fucking principals’ meeting,” the official said.

But if the U.S. national security process is the corpse in Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, stabbed to death by (spoiler alert) multiple hands, Bolton is only the most recent member of this administration to stick a knife in it. In policy areas including Iraq, Afghanistan, atrocity prevention, and trade policy, Beltway dwellers have been hearing from friends and former colleagues inside government almost since President Donald Trump’s first weeks that structures and procedures were going by the wayside.

The stories have become more public and almost too numerous to track. Some are just odd violations of tradition—why would Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, rather than a Pentagon official, travel to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to meet the body of a service member fallen in Afghanistan? Others, such as allegations that at different times both Bolton and Trump avoided working with civilian defense officials and instead went directly to uniformed officers with briefing or policy requests, are more serious. Former Defense Department and NSC official Loren DeJonge Schulman writes that it is “unclear what role senior civilian defense officials even played” in the planning, and then the aborting, of a military strike on Iran in June.

Plenty of critics suggest that this doesn’t really matter. In the six decades of the National Security Council’s existence, they note, some presidents relied on it more, others less.

“The system quickly snapped back into place,” the Marine Corps University professor and Army veteran James Joyner argues, “when their successors wanted a more structured approach.”

President Franklin D. Roosevelt

Others make a results argument: The NSC process didn’t prevent quagmires in Iraq or Vietnam, didn’t produce a workable way to win the peace in Afghanistan or Libya, didn’t protect American workers from the China trade shock, didn’t prevent genocides in Rwanda or Syria. Maybe the United States didn’t need it anyway.

John Gans, a historian of the NSC process, frames the alternative as President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who described himself as a “juggler” and who “liked to keep his options open and just about everyone else — military leaders, diplomats, Congress, even Vice President Harry Truman — in the dark.”

It’s immediately obvious why that approach might appeal to Trump, who likes his team to fight one another like gladiators… or The Apprentice contestants. It’s less obvious why anyone acquainted with history would think it was a good idea. First, there’s the little matter of how Roosevelt’s obfuscations affected Harry S. Truman, who had no idea the United States had built a working atomic bomb until Roosevelt’s death left him president.

Then there’s the sheer size of the national security establishment. The U.S. military counts more than 2 million people under arms, active duty plus reserves. Roosevelt had 16 million serving during World War II—but the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Roosevelt innovation that ran the war, was then a White House agency. Even in its current decline, the State Department manages more than 250 overseas posts, many with representation from as many as 40 U.S. government agencies. Then there’s the intelligence community, 17 agencies with something like 890,000 employees with top-secret or higher clearances. Together those agencies are trying to prevent and win wars, create jobs at home and sell goods abroad, and protect Americans when they travel and the image of America that foreigners have.

It’s nonsense to suggest all of that complexity can be managed without a strong interagency process. And it’s naive to imagine that the breakdown in process is limited to the complaints about meetings that we’ve heard. After all, many of the participants—even those kicked unceremoniously out of office by Trump—have kept quiet about what they’ve seen.

Intelligence agencies

At the Pentagon, Schulman and two former Pentagon colleagues have highlighted process changes and lapses that add up to a significant decline in civilian oversight. Retired intelligence officials worry that the community is demoralized, leading to “rote production” of intelligence in the near term and a loss of talent in the long term. Meanwhile, there’s more leakage between the functions normally reserved for intelligence agencies and those carried out by policy agencies.

For example, as Trump’s team debated whether or not to strike Iran, news reports indicated that CIA Director Gina Haspel had explicitly “favored” a strike—a surprising departure from the expectation that intelligence officials bring information but do not make policy.

- Foreign Policy

 


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