Sandy Berger Headlines
Mitt Romney Gets The Love, Ron Paul (And Newt Gingrich) Should, Too February 9, 2012, 5:53 am CST I appeared as a guest on RT America yesterday (full clip below) to discuss ongoing media bias of the 2012 GOP election coverage -- and by media bias, I don't merely mean a reporter occasionally slipping up and revealing his or her favored ... |
Mitt Romney Gets The Love, Ron Paul (And Newt Gingrich) Should, Too February 9, 2012, 2:53 am CST I appeared as a guest on RT America yesterday (full clip below) to discuss ongoing media bias of the 2012 GOP election coverage -- and by media bias, I don't merely mean a reporter occasionally slipping up and revealing his or her favored ... |
Mitt Romney Gets The Love, Ron Paul (And Newt Gingrich) Should, Too February 9, 2012, 1:38 am CST I appeared as a guest on RT America yesterday (full clip below) to discuss ongoing media bias of the 2012 GOP election coverage -- and by media bias, I don't merely mean a reporter occasionally slipping up and revealing his or her favored ... |
Komen flap reveals liberal media bias, encroaches on rights, columnists say February 6, 2012, 8:03 am CST The mainstream media is drawing criticism from its own for what's seen as a pro-choice bias in the reporting of the ongoing... |
Komen flap reveals liberal media bias, encroaches on rights, columnists say February 6, 2012, 7:49 am CST The mainstream media is drawing criticism from its own for what's seen as a pro-choice bias in the reporting of the ongoing... |
Liberal media bias can't be denied February 6, 2012, 6:13 am CST Re "Liberal media image doesn't reflect what is being reported," (Viewpoints, Feb. 4) |
Insiders: Pentagon's Budget Cuts Are Pragmatic for Changing Times February 6, 2012, 7:30 am CST Three-quarters of National Journal’s National Security Insiders said the Obama administration’s plan to cut the Pentagon budget was a smart decision driven by the end of the Iraq war and the nation’s current fiscal crisis, ... |
Grasping a new reality February 4, 2012, 11:33 pm CST WASHINGTON — First, they had to get the handshake right. Two decades earlier in Geneva, Chinese Premier Zhou En-lai had been mortally offended when U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles spurned his offered hand. As TV cameras flashed ... |
Back Pocket
- The Samuel “Sandy” Berger Scandals
(Feb 03, 2007)
- The Events Leading to the Sandy Berger Scandal
(Jan 30, 2007)
- Twirling the Cognitive Kaleidoscope
(Jan 25, 2006)
- Be Vigilant
(Jan 23, 2006)
- Nuclear Saber Rattling
(Jan 22, 2006)
- John Stossel takes flak over Education Spending
(Jan 18, 2006)
- Kennedy's Children's Book
(Jan 17, 2006)
- Specter Walks the Line
(Jan 15, 2006)
- You say Alito I say Alioto
(Jan 09, 2006)
- 10 Foolish Myths
(Dec 28, 2005)
Past Articles
- Tuesday, December 27
- A Pay Raise for Senator PorkBarrel (0)
- Thursday, December 01
- Iraq Strategy: Executive Summary (13)
- Wednesday, November 09
- The Fair Tax - An Overview (0)
- Monday, September 12
- Take Back the Memorial (37)
- Friday, September 09
- Presidents are not perfect (37)
- Katrina Relief Effort (0)
- Saturday, September 03
- Hillary Clinton: Democrats Are Betting On the Wrong Horse (78)
- Friday, September 02
- Instantly Pinpoint Your Political Identity (38)
- Friday, August 26
- Pat Robertson the Assasinator... (43)
- Thursday, August 25
- You can lead the media to a proud military mom, but you can't make them think. (19)
Older articles
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Posted by: archiveguard on Aug 01, 2005 - 10:36 PM
3.5 . . .AND IN THE STATE DEPARTMENT AND THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT
The State Department
The Commission asked Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage in 2004 why the
State Department had so long pursued what seemed, and ultimately proved, to be a
hopeless effort to persuade the Taliban regime in Afghanistan to deport Bin
Ladin. Armitage replied: "We do what the State Department does, we don't go
out and fly bombers, we don't do things like that[;] . . . we do our part in
these things." 86
Fifty years earlier, the person in Armitage's position would not have spoken
of the Department of State as having such a limited role. Until the late 1950s,
the department dominated the processes of advising the president and Congress on
U.S. relations with the rest of the world. The National Security Council was
created in 1947 largely as a result of lobbying from the Pentagon for a forum
where the military could object if they thought the State Department was setting
national objectives that the United States did not have the wherewithal to
pursue.
The State Department retained primacy until the 1960s, when the Kennedy and
Johnson administrations turned instead to Robert McNamara's Defense Department,
where a mini-state department was created to analyze foreign policy issues.
President Richard Nixon then concentrated policy planning and policy
coordination in a powerful National Security Council staff, overseen by Henry
Kissinger.
In later years, individual secretaries of state were important figures, but
the department's role continued to erode. State came into the 1990s overmatched
by the resources of other departments and with little support for its budget
either in the Congress or in the president's Office of Management and Budget.
Like the FBI and the CIA's Directorate of Operations, the State Department
had a tradition of emphasizing service in the field over service in Washington.
Even ambassadors, however, often found host governments not only making
connections with the U.S. government through their own missions in Washington,
but working through the CIA station or a Defense attaché. Increasingly, the
embassies themselves were overshadowed by powerful regional commanders in chief
reporting to the Pentagon.87
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