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- <text id=93TT2276>
- <title>
- Dec. 27, 1993: Bring On The Admiral
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DEFENSE, Page 22
- Bring On The Admiral
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An abrupt resignation and speedy replacement signal Clinton's
- problems with the military--and the President's intention
- to set things right
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Michael Duffy and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Maybe it's Mission: Impossible to be Bill Clinton's Secretary
- of Defense. Just how do you bridge the gap between a White House
- focused on domestic problems--and headed by a man with no
- time in uniform--and a military wary, to put it mildly, of
- the new Commander in Chief? And how do you act convincingly
- at a time when the U.S. is still defining how it should project
- its power in a world where the ideological certitudes of the
- cold war have been replaced by raucous warlords and wild-eyed
- nationalists? When Clinton made his choice for the job last
- December, he could be sure that Les Aspin, who had made a career
- in Congress as an expert on defense policy, possessed the necessary
- devotion to the task. As it turns out, he should have wondered
- more whether Aspin also had the bureaucratic agility and credibility
- to work with the armed services.
- </p>
- <p> By last Tuesday Clinton had his answer. No one spoke the word
- fired when he and Aspin appeared at a quickly arranged press
- conference to announce that the Secretary would be leaving his
- job in January. But Washington gossip had been building for
- months that one or more members of the President's foreign-policy
- team would have to go. The October battles in Somalia that left
- 18 American servicemen dead had merely provided a focus for
- the growing sense that every time the Administration stepped
- abroad it stumbled. Though Aspin may not have been the man most
- responsible, he was one of the most visible and vulnerable symbols
- of the problem.
- </p>
- <p> It was a sign of how long the White House had been mulling over
- the Aspin departure--and how badly it wanted to head off another
- cycle of news stories about the frailty of Clinton's foreign-policy
- team--that it took just one day for the President to rush
- out his next choice for the job. Retired Navy Admiral Bobby
- Ray Inman, a former CIA deputy chief, inherits some of the same
- problems that bedeviled Aspin from the day he stepped into the
- job, including gays in the military and the question of when
- and how American forces should be used in a world of small regional
- conflicts. It also remains to be seen how even an adroit bureaucratic
- navigator like Inman will manage to court the brass while squeezing
- their budgets. But from the start it appeared that he would
- have the stature with both the Pentagon and the public that
- Aspin never achieved. Even Georgia Senator Sam Nunn, a man accustomed
- to shaking his head mournfully over Clinton's judgments on military
- matters, was full of praise for Inman. "I think it's a good
- selection," said Nunn, adding that he had been consulted in
- the choice.
- </p>
- <p> Aspin's problems had as much to do with his lumpish style as
- his policy positions. Rather than narrowing the cultural gap
- between the Oval Office and the war rooms, Aspin seemed to symbolize
- it. To the creased uniforms at the Pentagon, Aspin's rumpled
- suits and looping, ruminative pronouncements made him seem tweedy
- and hapless. Oddly for a man who first came to the Defense Department
- in the mid-1960s as one of the chart-toting whiz kids ushered
- in by Robert McNamara, Aspin was poor at organizational matters.
- In a place accustomed to firm decisions and stopwatch timing,
- he drove Pentagon planners crazy with meetings run like academic
- seminars, marked by late starts, later finishes and stretches
- of sedative analysis in between.
- </p>
- <p> The informality that can make Aspin agreeable as a man also
- made him unsuitable as a front man. At congressional hearings
- he was apt to put his elbow on the table and cradle his chin
- in one hand. He can irritate colleagues by referring to them
- by their last name only, or sometimes just the first. Military
- brass were startled to hear Aspin refer to General Colin Powell
- at a briefing by saying "Colin will take care of that." A senior
- Administration official summed up the problem: "Lacks gravitas."
- </p>
- <p> Even more damaging in the view of the White House were Aspin's
- frequent wobbles when he tried to articulate Administration
- policies in the media. During the first weeks of the fight over
- gays in the military he appeared on Face the Nation to air the
- view that Congress and the military brass had the power "to
- derail this thing." When he added that "if we can't work it
- out, we will disagree, and the thing won't happen," it sounded
- like an open invitation for opponents of the change to mobilize.
- Political insiders, however, sensed in the ousting of Aspin
- what they termed "inoculation" politics: the White House wanted
- to ward off Republican criticism of defense cuts. Though White
- House officials say there was no single incident that led to
- Aspin's departure, the murderous firefight in Mogadishu made
- it a foregone conclusion, especially after it was followed by
- a disastrous closed-door briefing to Congress at which Aspin
- was reportedly at a loss to describe the Administration's intentions
- in Somalia. But as far back as September, Aspin was seeing signs
- that Clinton's doubts about the foreign-policy team were beginning
- to focus upon him. During his regular meetings with the President,
- the Secretary had begun to detect a certain "crispness" in Clinton's
- manner. "Things just deteriorated," says an aide. "Each time
- was worse."
- </p>
- <p> When he sensed that his job was in danger, Aspin "put up quite
- a fight," says a White House aide. He bought some new suits
- creased in the right places and a few camera-friendly ties.
- By mid-November Clinton had quietly asked White House chief
- of staff Mack McClarty to come up with a list of potential replacements.
- Working with Vice President Al Gore, he assembled the names.
- </p>
- <p> Inman, who was at the top of Gore's list, had the advantage
- of having already been vetted by the White House last year as
- a potential CIA chief. At Gore's suggestion, the President invited
- Inman to the White House for a two-hour afterdinner chat about
- national-security issues. Though it wasn't intended as a job
- interview, it was enough to impress Clinton that he may have
- found his candidate. Not only was Inman a policy expert and
- a businessman with managerial experience, like Clinton he was
- a small-town boy from the South (East Texas) who had risen to
- the top.
- </p>
- <p> It may have been harder to sell Clinton to Inman, a Bush voter
- who didn't much feel like returning to Washington. "The President
- had to talk him into it," says a senior White House official.
- "It wasn't about defense or budgets. They just needed to get
- to know each other." The admiral was taken aback when the White
- House contacted him about the job two weeks ago. He agreed to
- take it only after he was satisfied that Clinton was personally
- committed to building a strong, forward-looking national-security
- policy with bipartisan support. Though impressed by Clinton,
- Inman still hesitated until his old friend "Chris," as Inman
- calls Secretary of State Warren Christopher, stepped in with
- an appeal. When the deal was finally cut, the President was
- particularly pleased that word of Aspin's departure had not
- leaked. On Wednesday he remarked gleefully to an aide, "It is
- absolutely astonishing that this thing has held."
- </p>
- <p> Inman did not ask Clinton for a specific dollar commitment on
- the defense budget. Long convinced that the Pentagon procurement
- process is bloated and slow, Inman strongly believes more prudent
- spending could achieve savings, and is likely to make procurement
- reform a major goal. Aspin never really got control over the
- budget process. Early this year he sent memos to service chiefs
- telling them to propose $11 billion in reductions in addition
- to cuts the Bush Administration had already made in the Defense
- Department for fiscal 1994. But when he introduced his first
- Pentagon budget in March, it failed to terminate a single major
- program. As Aspin told after his resignation, "It's obviously
- better to be Secretary of Defense when budgets are going up
- than when they're headed down."
- </p>
- <p> Though Inman will be the first career military officer to become
- Defense Secretary since George Marshall left the job in 1951,
- the admiral might not be any more forthcoming with the military
- than Aspin was. That's because, matters of style aside, the
- outgoing Secretary took few positions that led to friction with
- Pentagon brass. Though he came to the job willing to entertain
- the idea that the U.S should be prepared to use force selectively
- to solve regional problems like Bosnia and Haiti, he quickly
- became a defender of General Powell's all-or-nothing view that
- in places where the U.S. is not prepared to commit the full
- extent of its power, it should not commit any.
- </p>
- <p> The Pentagon had become accustomed to light supervision by civilians
- under Reagan and Bush, when Defense Department officials routinely
- had their staff work done by uniformed personnel of the Joint
- Chiefs. Inman may be less likely than Aspin to fill Pentagon
- offices with former congressional aides. But if Inman's wise,
- he will fill posts more quickly. Aspin launched one of the major
- undertakings of his tenure, a "bottom up" review of military-force
- needs in the post-cold war era, even as dozens of high-level
- vacancies remained, including the secretaries of the Army, Navy
- and Air Force.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, his most serious problem in the Secretary's job was
- not related to his policy decisions but to the overall drift
- of the Administration he was part of. "Les Aspin was dealt a
- difficult hand," says Oklahoma Representative Dave McCurdy,
- a member of the House Armed Services Committee, which Aspin
- once chaired. "The first card was gays and lesbians: faceup.
- Then came the three regional problems--Somalia, Bosnia and
- Haiti--for which nobody in the Administration had real answers."
- The heaving and rocking of the Clinton White House as it struggles
- to define America's role in the world may prove to be Bobby
- Ray Inman's biggest vexation too. If the Secretary of Defense
- is supposed to symbolize the President's policy, maybe Les Aspin,
- with all his vagueness and indecision, did that job all too
- well.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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