Although President Barack Obama is taking the credit for Wednesday’s historic deal to reverse decades of U.S. policy toward Cuba, when Hillary Clinton was secretary of state, she was the main architect of the new policy and pushed far harder for a deal than the Obama White House.
From 2009 until her departure in early 2013, Clinton and her top aides took the lead on the sometimes public, often private interactions with the Cuban government. According to current and former White House and State Department officials and several Cuba policy experts who were involved in the discussions, Clinton was also the top advocate inside the government for ending travel and trade restrictions on Cuba and reversing 50 years of U.S. policy to isolate the Communist island nation. Repeatedly, she pressed the White House to move faster and faced opposition from cautious high-ranking White House officials.
After Obama announced the deal Wednesday, which included the release of aid contractor Alan Gross, Clinton issued a supportive statement distributed by the National Security Council press team. “As Secretary of State, I pushed for his release, stayed in touch with Alan’s wife Judy and their daughters, and called for a new direction in Cuba," she said. "Despite good intentions, our decades-long policy of isolation has only strengthened the Castro regime's grip on power.”
Yet Clinton played down her own role in the issue, which will surely become important if she decides to run for president. Top prospective Republican candidates, including Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio have all come out against the president’s policy shift.
Clinton’s advocacy on behalf of opening a new relationship with Cuba began almost as soon as she came into office. Obama had campaigned on a promise to engage enemies, but the White House initially was slow to make good on that pledge, and on the Cuba front enacted only a modest relaxation of travel rules. From the start, Clinton pushed to hold Obama to his promise with regard to Cuba.
“Hillary Clinton played a very large role,” said Steve Clemons, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation who advocated for changes to U.S.-Cuba policy. “The president, when he ran for office and when he came in, thought that doing something on Cuba front would be smart. But as soon as he got into office, though, every other priority hit him.”
If there was any doubt that President Obama's move on Cuba is a massive foreign policy legacy point for the history books that will stand the test of time, please note the blinding speed at which the credit for the deal is being given to someone else.
Also, if there was ever any doubt that Hillary Clinton was not going to have trouble earning the trust of Obama 2008 primary voters, well, please note the same goddamn thing. The false modesty angle actually made me laugh aloud while reading it, as if this wasn't the perfect example of That Awesome Co-Worker Taking Credit.
It's one thing to say "Secretary Clinton had a role in this" and another thing completely to say she was the "main architect" of a diplomatic coup that happened 2 years after she left Foggy Bottom. Maybe I'd be a little less angry if this was the first time people were trying to "Aww shucks" their way into giving her credit for something President Obama accomplished, and again I'm sure she did play a part.
But in the end, a Secretary of State is implementing the foreign policy of a President. Period. Deal with it.
All of the discussion so far appears to focus on Rand Paul's name not appearing twice on the November General Election ballot. I'm sure that if Rand somehow won the Republican presidential primary, he would be happy to not run for re-election to the Senate.
ReplyDeleteHowever, as a hedge, he may still place his name on the Republican primary in Kentucky for the Senate nomination, but not put his name on the Kentucky ballot for the Republican presidential nomination, thus avoiding the law for the moment. After all, if Rand cannot win the presidential nomination without the Kentucky vote, why bother? If he wins the presidential nomination, chuck the Senate ballot slot. If he flames out in the presidential run, he still has the Senate race.
Some of us old-timers remember when Tom Easterly defeated incumbent John Breckinridge in the Democratic primary for Kentucky's 6th Congressional District in 1978. Mary Louise Foust had been the winner of the Republican primary, but withdrew, saying she had wanted to run against Breckinridge, The Republicans nominated Larry Hopkins, literally in a smoke-filled room, who went on to narrowly defeat Easterly in November. Don't know the process for withdrawing after winning a primary today.
What the fuck?
ReplyDeleteI am literally speechless about this, which my friends will assure you is an absolutely astonishing condition.
Are the hysterical ninnies of FireDogLake and the Daily Kos actually correct, in that Clinton is not to be trusted?
Any GOP Congress would be as fine with Red State residents dropping dead as the Governors of the Medicaid fishrot have shown themselves to be, for Blue State residents they would back up the conceptual bus to make certain they all were dead. Especially those sister fuckers from Vermont.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't trust the hysterical ninnies at Kos and PanicDogLake--it seems that it wasn't Hillary's people pushing this, but the DC media.
ReplyDeleteIt is funny that some are ignoring the Vatican's role in the US/Cuba negotiations too.
PanicDogLake! Thanks, I needed a chuckle today.
ReplyDeleteAnd, yeah, His Holiness. The smug little conviction that "progressive" equals "atheist" has become so rancid, like a carton milk left out in the summer sun, that I have started reminding people that 80% of the votes from the Democratic Coalition are cast by Catholics and Protestants. If the atheists really want to cut us loose, they will find themselves falling like a strut snapped from from a B-17 - while the plane flies on with a bit of a performance hit.