Blogs and Stories
The Diplomatic Mess That the Press Is Missing
By the time the Couric scoop materialized, I’d already received more than a dozen calls about the blog scoops from talented and panting people whose names had not yet been mentioned even in a blog. And as they transmitted their inside information, the information itself had reached folkloric proportions. The scoops had nearly reached the level of truth.
In fact, they ascended to the epistemological summit the very next day in the New York Times, despite the reporter’s considerable care in phrasing his scoops. Mark Landler used words like “closing in on naming,” and “likely.” But such is the stature of the Times that a “likely” and a “may” translates into a certainty. This should chill the Times from running such stories to begin with, though it doesn’t.
The story conveyed a piece of previously published fact, namely that Clinton would re-appoint William Burns, a career foreign service officer, to the critical position of undersecretary of state for political affairs. It then went on to repeat the rumors about Ross, Holbrooke, and Haass. It didn’t accurately portray the likely extent of the Ross and Holbrooke portfolios.
The point of rehearsing this flow of information is just to underline the power of the blogs on the mainstreamers. When the key networkers in the foreign policy community start echoing the blog stories, outlets like the Times and CBS just can’t resist any longer following suit even when they cannot confirm the information.
These pressures are, of course, worrisome. But far more worrisome is the fact that the job scoops seem to be keeping the elite press from covering some stories with profound consequences. I’m thinking here of the mainstreamers delving into why Clinton and Obama are appointing people like Holbrooke and Ross and will appoint many others like them. In part it’s because diplomatic problems around the world are so desperate. The far larger reason, however, is that our diplomatic service no longer possesses the talent of the last fifty years. So Hillary has to look outside to the former great diplomats.
The problem will arise when these new envoys run afoul, or at least are at cross purposes, with the assistant secretaries of state for those regions and with the ambassadors, and when their writs transcend two or more assistant secretaries. When Holbrooke negotiated the famous Dayton Accords in 1995, he was also the assistant secretary of state for European affairs. While Chris Hill was doing the bargaining for North Korea over its nuclear weapons, he also was serving as assistant secretary of state for East Asian affairs. So, with these two wearing two hats each, there were no conflicts of authority to adjudicate. Now, I would do just what Hillary is doing and appoint the titans, but it has to be done with everyone’s eyes open in advance.
Another uncovered story of real consequence is not just about who is getting appointed to the new power jobs in national security, but what ideological baggage they are carrying with them into office. George W. Bush’s appointees turned out to be almost all neoconservatives of one stripe or another. And the press didn’t do much to scrutinize their beliefs before then.
Are the Obama appointees, most of them from the Washington think tanks, bearing their own ideological fruit? Do they too want to promote democracy around the world and do nation-building? Many of them speak of exercising “strategic leadership.” What does that mean operationally?
I long for the day when all the foreign policy and national security jobs are filled.
Leslie H. Gelb, a former Times columnist and senior government official, is author of the forthcoming HarperCollins book Power Rules: How Common Sense Can Rescue American Foreign Policy, which shows how to think about and use power in the 21st century. He is president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations.









Many times I have told my children & now my grandchildren about an old saying. People that do the same thing over & over again & keep looking for a different result are people that spend their lives with heads in the clouds. The policy when it comes to dealing with other nations is the same policy that all the so called people in the know learned form the old UK better called "how I can create a mess, start a war, begin the destroy a country & be called a diplomat" Sadly both parties have been drinking the same from the same water & the people that pretend to know, let's just say look at our past. The best advise I could give to when it comes to finding good people is simple, find people that don't know it can't be done right & then they go out & do it. These same old retreads can tell you up front it can't be done & guess what, they can't do it....
Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.
Please log in to leave comments.