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- <text id=93TT2426>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: Obstacle Course
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ADMINISTRATION, Page 26
- Obstacle Course
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By getting snarled in a battle over gays in the military, Clinton
- has lost valuable momentum. How long will it take him to get
- back on track?
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON - With reporting by David S. Jackson/
- San Francisco and Elaine Shannon and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The White House staff filed into the East Room last Friday
- at 5 p.m. for what had been regarded internally as a badly
- needed "pep rally." Chief of staff Mack McLarty opened with some
- keep-your-chin-up remarks. Then came some encouraging words from
- Tipper Gore and a circumspect comment from Hillary Rodham
- Clinton. "It's just the first week," she said. Al Gore spoke
- next, making a joke about his dancing ability. The mood grew
- lighthearted, reminding several in the audience of what one
- called "the whole campaign bus-tour thing."
- </p>
- <p> But when President Clinton began to speak, the atmosphere
- changed. Clinton laid into his aides for leaking information to
- the press and lamented his Administration's maladroit handling
- of the gays-in-the-military crisis. He warned his team to stop
- dumping on each other in print, to "rise above the Washington
- culture" and "live by your values, not theirs." The clear
- message, said a staffer, was that Clinton still believes he can
- change the way things work in the nation's capital.
- </p>
- <p> If only it were so. Just when he wanted to focus "like a
- laser beam" on the economy, Clinton was sidetracked for five
- days by a once obscure campaign promise to lift the nearly
- 50-year-old ban on gays in the military. No sooner had Clinton
- emerged from the embarrassing miscalculation about Zoe Baird
- than he found himself in an even stickier political quagmire.
- After promising in his Inaugural Address to end an era of
- "deadlock and drift," Clinton was suddenly at war with the Joint
- Chiefs of Staff as well as members of his own party in Congress.
- Worse yet, the spectacle of Clinton clinging so resolutely to
- his gay-rights pledge after breaking broader promises on taxes,
- the deficit and spending projects raised questions about his
- judgment. "The most disturbing thing isn't that he fought for
- gays," said a Clinton adviser. "It's that he dumped the
- middle-class tax cut, signaled that he would raise taxes on most
- Americans, and then stuck by the gays. That's the way the
- Republicans will play this."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton temporarily quelled the crisis by reaching an
- agreement with his principal antagonist on the issue, Georgia
- Senator Sam Nunn, to halt the practice of asking military
- recruits about their sexual orientation, while postponing an
- official lifting of the ban until July 15. With Nunn's support,
- Clinton had enough swing votes in the Senate to block a
- Republican attempt--expected this week--to write the
- existing ban into law. And he earned six months to concentrate
- on more pressing matters while aides worked out the details of
- a permanent repeal. "I am looking forward to getting on with
- this issue," he said, "and with these other issues, which were
- so central to the campaign."
- </p>
- <p> A top Clinton aide insisted last week that the crisis had
- been "completely unavoidable" ever since Clinton first promised
- to lift the ban in a speech in Boston in October 1991. But a
- close look at how Clinton and his team tried in recent weeks to
- defuse the issue shows that the Administration has much to learn
- about the Washington political game. The Clinton team was simply
- unprepared to handle the powerful legislators, military brass
- and internal leakers who turned the gays-in-the-military debate
- into a disaster.
- </p>
- <p> The Clintonites did see trouble coming. Following the
- election, Clinton deputized Washington lawyer John Holum to
- consult with military officials during the transition about how
- best to lift the ban during the first 30 days of the term "with
- minimum disruption to combat effectiveness." Working through
- intermediaries was Clinton's first mistake, says Arizona
- Republican Senator John McCain, who opposes gays in the
- military. "A smarter scenario would have been to ask [the
- Chiefs] down to Little Rock during the transition, bring up the
- subject and say, `Look, I made this commitment, help me work my
- way through this.' Instead, the Chiefs were just told to do this
- and do that."
- </p>
- <p> Holum discovered during the transition that the Joint
- Chiefs were willing to end the practice of asking recruits about
- their sexual preferences, but strongly opposed an Executive
- Order that would immediately end the ban on gays in uniform.
- Holum floated several options to transition officials, including
- a two-stage approach to be carried out according to the
- Pentagon's own timetable. That idea angered gay activists, who
- leaked word of Clinton's apparent hedging to reporters at a time
- when the President-elect was breaking other promises.
- </p>
- <p> At that point, Defense Secretary-designate Les Aspin
- stepped in to mediate, proposing a compromise in which Clinton
- would "instruct" Aspin to draft the Executive Order over a
- six-month period. Aspin sold the plan to Clinton at a Blair
- House meeting three days before the Inauguration, but that too
- was leaked before Aspin met with the Chiefs. When he did, he
- discovered that the Chiefs had grown much more resistant.
- Aspin's attempts to keep the Chiefs on board failed during a
- stormy two-hour session in the top-secret, soundproof "tank" at
- the Pentagon on Jan. 22. "It was not a fun meeting," said a
- military official. "It gave new meaning to the expression `frank
- and cordial.' " On Jan. 24 Aspin appeared on television to warn
- that his plan was in trouble.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton might yet have avoided the worst of the crisis had
- he sought the advice and support of Nunn, the powerful chairman
- of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Nunn, who is a close
- confidant of General Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint
- Chiefs, often seems to believe that all military matters are
- best disposed by him and that anything else is an attempt to
- railroad the Pentagon bureaucracy. But Clinton tapped Aspin to
- deal with Nunn in part because relations between the Senator and
- the President have never been great. The White House has not
- forgotten Nunn's lukewarm effort on behalf of Clinton during the
- Georgia primary last year, nor his sudden disappearance from a
- scheduled campaign swing with Hillary Clinton a few days after
- the Gennifer Flowers story broke.
- </p>
- <p> By last Monday, Nunn sparked a free-for-all by expressing
- contempt for the White House's approach to lifting the ban. "If
- there's a strategy there, it hasn't been explained to me," he
- said. Smelling blood, Senate Republicans led by Robert Dole
- vowed on Tuesday to block Clinton's Executive Order at the first
- available opportunity. Meanwhile, the Joint Chiefs and their
- powerful squadrons of lobbyists on Capitol Hill went to work on
- lawmakers, raising fears about sexual misconduct and reportedly
- circulating a graphic video titled The Gay Agenda, which
- featured some of the more flamboyant entries in a gay parade.
- On Wednesday Nunn delivered a withering 25-minute speech on the
- Senate floor that posed 42 questions (example: "What
- restrictions should be placed on displays of affection while in
- uniform, such as dancing at a formal event?") that he would want
- to raise at hearings in March.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, during the next 48 hours Nunn met twice with
- Clinton and Senate majority leader George Mitchell at the White
- House to work out a compromise. The first two-hour session on
- Wednesday night proved inconclusive: unable to win concessions
- from Clinton on what to do about avowed gays during the
- six-month period, Nunn initially balked even at halting the
- questioning of incoming recruits.
- </p>
- <p> On Thursday night the parley was interrupted by news of a
- federal court judge's ruling in California that the Navy's
- discharge of Keith Meinhold, a petty officer who is gay, was
- unconstitutional under the equal-protection clause of the 14th
- Amendment. The decision gave Clinton more ammunition, but by
- that point he was anxious, as an adviser put it, to "get the
- whole thing out of the way and get back to work." With Mitchell
- working hard to keep the talks going, Nunn caved in on the
- matter of questioning recruits and Clinton deferred to several
- Nunn proposals, including one providing that service members who
- declare their homosexuality before July 15 be separated from
- active duty and placed in the standby reserve.
- </p>
- <p> Though gay-rights activists praised Clinton for
- catapulting their cause to the top of the political agenda, the
- victory came at a steep political price for the President.
- Clinton's poor reading of the congressional mood since his
- Inauguration means that lawmakers will be ready to second-guess
- the White House on tough votes. Already, pivotal Southern
- Democrats have demonstrated how easy it is to abandon the new
- President. If Clinton is to move forward on his plans to
- kick-start the economy, lower the deficit and reform health
- care, he cannot afford to spend much more political capital on
- sideshows. "Clinton is one of the most gifted politicians I've
- ever seen," said Republican Congressman Newt Gingrich. "We all
- know he's very smart. We're not sure he's very wise."
- </p>
- <p> Part of Clinton's genius during the campaign was his
- ability to convince liberals that he was one of them while
- posing as a new kind of Democrat who would take back the party
- from its special interests. But one Clinton adviser is worried
- that the President's first two weeks in office have sent an
- ominous message to the middle class: "We're not in touch with
- your moral values and we're not going to fight for you either."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, 70% of those surveyed in a TIME/CNN poll were
- satisfied with the speed at which Clinton is getting down to
- business. And Clinton's start-up problems will be all but
- forgotten if he presents a credible economic plan in his State
- of the Union speech on Feb. 17. Last Saturday Clinton traveled
- to Camp David for a two-day retreat with staff and Cabinet
- officials. If a team benefits from adversity, then the new
- President and his colleagues have a wealth of experience from
- which to learn and recover.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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