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The Assassination of Greg Craig
Ron Edmonds / AP Photo
The White House counsel was done in by a scurrilous leaks campaign. So much for the Obama team's pledge to be transparent, forthright and accountable for their actions.
Gregory Craig, White House counsel to President Obama and national security advisor to Obama during the presidential campaign, resigned his post this past Friday. But when rumors broke Thursday of his imminent departure, Craig had not written his farewell note and may not have planned to leave–yet.
Since the summer, word had been leaking that Greg Craig’s days were numbered and that Obama campaign legal counsel Bob Bauer would be moving in to take Craig’s spot. But the situation seemed similar to the leaks about National Security Advisor Jim Jones’ supposedly tenuous hold on his job—which were either untrue, or turned around by Jones’ performance. The leaks about Craig also seemed unfounded—especially in light of direct statements from the White House that the statements were untrue and that he was not departing.
The sustained nature of the leaks—and the fact that they ultimately proved to be true—indicates something quite disappointing for anyone who had hoped that the Obama White House would operate more transparently and honestly than the Bush team had.
Some observers are now calling this incident the Obama team’s first assassination by leak.
• Lloyd Grove: The Boys Obama Throws Under the BusSuch intrigue and innuendo stand in sharp contrast to the internal vow of key stakeholders in Barack Obama’s campaign, as reported in David Plouffe’s insider account Audacity to Win—whom he says vowed not to allow “@#%holes” and leaks and the blame game to disrupt any aspect of their campaign. When problems arose or mistakes were made, the president and his team were forthright and dealt with each other directly and confessed their sins, when they committed them, to the public.
Obama himself set a tone of a “No Drama Obama” campaign and worked hard to keep the campaign’s machinations on the high road and not in the political gutter.
What just happened to Gregory Craig should not have happened in Obama Land. It’s something from what Dick Cheney would have called “The Dark Side”--where insinuation and character assassination were leaked to undermine a foe. Think of the manner in which Scooter Libby and Karl Rove promulgated the revelation that Bush administration thorn Joe Wilson was married to a CIA covert operative.
I spoke to Gregory Craig in the summer when the first leaks began to break. While he suspected they were driven by someone in the White House who was frustrated with the slow progress on shuttering GITMO, Craig did not know who was out to get him. He had no idea.
But the sustained nature of the leaks—and the fact that they ultimately proved to be true—indicates something quite disappointing for anyone who had hoped that the Obama White House would operate more transparently and honestly than the Bush team had.
In fact, leaks are becoming standard fare by key players in the Obama administration. Someone, most likely on the military/intel side of the president’s national security bureaucracy, leaked Afghanistan Commanding General Stanley McChrystal’s report to Bob Woodward. Recently, other political players infuriated U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry by leaking his eleventh-hour contrarian view on a U.S. force surge to the press.
But it’s quite hard to maintain the kind of Obama-esque upbeat tone of transparency and forthrightness and punish staff for leaking when the president himself is standing by and doing nothing as his closest advisors undermine one of their own.
NPR’s Nina Totenberg puts the finger on White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel. “There doesn’t seem to be much doubt that these leaks came at least indirectly from Rahm Emanuel,” she reported. “What is the cause of the friction? It's very hard to say. Was it Rahm not wanting to have another power center? Was it their personalities? Was it Rahm seeing the GITMO stuff as a distraction from the president's agenda?"









Boring inside baseball account of the sacking of a minor nobody. I'm sure it was a big deal to Craig, but why should it matter to me?
It really doesn't matter too much unless you're still stuck in the "Obama is different" mode. And many people still are. It was amazing to me that so many people believed that someone who is a complete party man - never voted against his party during his entire tenure in the state senate, and played by the party book for his whole political career, supporting the right party bosses, etc. - and yet so many people didn't realize he is a politician. Agree or disagree with his policies, he has never bucked the system.
Does voting "Present!" count??
CRAIG'S DEPARTURE HAS BEEN OUT FOR MONTHS
It seems that sniping at Obama is the style and Clemons column is another opportunity to attempt to diminish Obama. Craig obviously ran into a buzz saw in attempting to carry out Obama's desire to close Gitmo and establish a proper procedure to deal with its detainees. I don't think anybody could have negotiated those rough waters without taking a lot of hits.
The bigger point is that not all staff choices work out, and when either the appointee feels its time to leave (having accomplished what they set out to achieve in a particular position) or the president feels that he would be better served by having someone else take the position, it does not necessarily represent a significant moment in the administration.
Craig's departure has been reported for months, and it is not particularly news that he will be leaving at the end of the year which is a few months from now. I guess that Clemons sees no story in saying that Craig did his job and now wants to try a different approach.
Uh... have you heard of the phrase "making mountains out of molehills"? I think that applies rather nicely here.
Furthermore, while President George W. Bush set the bar pretty low for transparency and I'm almost always in favor of more transparency, I'd still say President Obama is doing a fantastic job.
I suppose Carter did a good job also. we just made him look bad.
Carter gets a worse rap than he deserves; Reagan has a better reputation than he deserves.
Ă˜bama is making Bush look good.
Taken to calling him er-BAH-mah now, have we?
As to the content of your comment: just because you made a statement doesn't make it true. When President Obama does a 180 and starts being more secretive than Bush, maybe you'll actually have a point. As things stand, your comment doesn't make sense.
gak, it looks like you have good meds.
Actually, I don't have health insurance, so no meds for me. I just relax knowing that on his first day in office, he rolled back the Bush policies that made it difficult for presidential records to be released in a timely fashion. FOIA requests are more likely to be granted now. I also am happy to know that executive employees aren't allowed to accept lobbyist gifts and there are stricter ethics guidelines in place.
Sure, there are things I'd like to see get done and I'd like more transparency, but to say that he is less transparent than George W. Bush is absolutely ridiculous.
Steve Clemons is a very smart, savvy and well-connected foreign policy commentator. He has a terrific blog, The Washington Note, that I can personally recommend to anyone interested in substantive foreign policy issues. He is also not above attending the insider soirees that deal in high level gossip and rumor and sometimes sharing the dishy details with his readers. He has been supportive of Obama, but he is also an astute critic who is not afraid to go on the record with well-thought out and knowledgeable arguments. All this is very important in understanding that what Steve is saying about the Craig departure and the Obama White House leaking means there is more internal discontent and indiscipline than meets the mainstream media eye. It will be interesting to see where Craig goes. He wanted a foreign policy post, but I don't think Hillary will have him as any Ambassador after the scorching he gave her during the primary campaign with his assessment of her lack of foreign policy expertise and accomplishment. There is also some chatter about being appointed a judge.
Craig has had a high powered Washington career for a long time, but it didn't save him from an inglorious end at the hands of a politically ruthless antagonist.
Intrigue and dissent within an administration? Oh, the horror!
Darn it! Hate that when it happens.
Well said. I'm gonna read clemons blog. Thanx
Change we can believe in?
No surprise! Its the Chicago Way!
Raum Emanuel is practicing for when he is ready to do Pelosi in. Sadly, few will care.
Steve Clemons isn't so smart. It was a Clinton appointee, Richard Armitrage, who outed Ms. Pflame, Joe Wilson's wife.
No relevence to the topic sailhardy.
Obama lied! Transparency died!
(Yawn)
So what? It's not as if he's kept OTHER campaign promises.
I find it so frustrating to read columnists who don't bring either wisdom or experience to their commentaries. Regardless of the context, managing a large organization in trying times tests the capacities of even the most skilled CEO's. Mr. Clemons, with all due respect, have you ever had line operating responsibility for a large staff of people under intense pressure? It's not easy, and conflict emerges out of real do-or-die situations being handled by human beings who are generally doing the best they can - oftentimes in the midst of personal crises we only hear about later - illness, family problems, accidents. Yes, we expect a lot of our leaders, and we should, as they carry our collective fate in their hands. But asking the impossible - especially if we have never walked in shoes anywhere near that size - is like a child expecting his dad to fly like Superman.
I believe the phrase is "It goes with the turf"
Quit defending subpare preformance.
I believe Rham is capable of the leaks but I will put my money on obama's consigliere Valerie Jarrett. This women runs the White House, she has more say then Michelle Obama. No one can identify her responsibilities but she is bambi's conscience and brains.
I believe Rham is capable of the leaks but I will put my money on obama's consigliere Valerie Jarrett. This women runs the White House, she has more say then Michelle Obama. No one can identify her responsibilities but she is bambi's conscience and brains. Valerie has gotten good training from John Daley's thuggery machine {Chicago politics}.
Capable is an understatement.
Obama is an Affirmative Action President. What did you expect?
It's never a good idea to vote for someone based on his skin color... you run the risk of electing an under-qualified, narcissistic grievance monger.
There were as many red flags with candidate Obama as were associated with Hasan at Fort Hood. They were ignored for the same reason: Political Correctness.
Of course, those Ivy League degrees and all that success and respect and power should have gone to you, because you're so much smarter. But alas, you are white, and as we all know, it's impossible for a white man to be successful or powerful.
Obama admitted benefitting from Affirmative Action...
I think it is a little dubious to heap encomiums on a person unable to enter a particular college except for skin-color based preference.
Perhaps you disagree.
So, the red flags of ACORN, Rev. Wright, the tie's to former terrorists, Michelle never being "proud of this country", his wealth redistribution double-talk, his fundamental lack of experience, or accomplishments, prior drug-use, etc.
Would these have been acceptable in a white man? Perhaps, but doubtful.
He may have been assisted by affirmative action in the degrees, but he did graduate and progress in the Ivy league, so give him his props there
Unfortunately, graduating from Universities are good for justifying a great starting salary, not entry to the White House.
You took the bait of maladapted, gotcha!
Crawl back under your rock, you dumb redneck.
That's the sort of reasoned discourse we need! What other skin-color pejoratives do you use when you're unable to offer a substantive response?
You have no idea roger if his neck is red.
What were these red Flags, Mal?
Also ... Is is better to vote for someone based on his Daddy's name ... don't you run the risk of electing an under-qualified, narcissistic war monger?
It's a funny thing about Affirmative Action ... it sometimes creates extraordinary leaders. Do you think that Eisenhower was named Supreme Allied Commander in spite of, or because of his name? If his name was Dwight Cohen do you think he would have been chosen?
Political Correctness used to be called Common Courtesy. Since we can dispense with it then up yours scumbag.
PS: Affirmative Action is a liberal policy. All of us who benefited from these dirty Liberal Policies (SS Survivor benefits, Education Loans, College grants, Unemployment, the GI bill, rural electrification, etc ...) should disqualify ourselves from holding public office.
PSS: The sack of filth Clarence Thomas benefited from Affirmative Action too, even though he would not admit it. Then the treacherous bastard wanted it gone after he got the benefit.
maladapted! Tell us how you really feel.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/us/politics/22craig.html
In an interview, Mr. Emanuel said Mr. Craig should not be faulted, especially on GuantĂ¡Â®Â¡mo.
"The president believes he has done a very good job and continues to do a very good job," Mr. Emanuel said. "The notion that you're going to blame him is ridiculous. He didn't create GuantĂ¡Â®Â¡mo. He is trying to work within the system to meet the president's goal."
Gregory Craig is an experienced, well connected world class attorney with an impeccable client list that included Bill Clinton and Fidel Castro.
His support of Obama over Hillary sent a signal into many quarters, so he was offered a key, though thankless job that turned out to be less than what it appeared.
Doing the president's bidding was an honor; hacking the bramble of White House power players quite another. Craig wasn't pushed out. He wanted out.
Waking up at a more decent hour to a solid six hours a day at $700 an hour is so much a better deal.
michaelslevinson.com
Mikey, good use of space for your response, short and sweet.
"Craig wasn't pushed out. He wanted out"
Wrong. Rahmbo wasn't happy and gutted him from behind.
Will the real Barack Obama stand up-- I mean, go away.
HRC 2012
Now sally! show a little more civility.
Obama is no different than any other politician. They don't get to their high levels by being loyalist, idealist. They are realist that are pragmatic and base their decisions on polls, lobbyist and getting re-elected. The moment Craig came up on the "to watch list" he was a marked man. Obama did what any other politician did and got rid of the perceived problem. he was just following tried and true playbook of high level politics.
I don't know, nor care, about all this inside-baseball scuttlebutt about who wielded the knife that slid into Greg Craig's toga.
But, if Rahm Emanuel is Obama's eager Cromwell, I'd sure love to know who represents the Gladstone in his ear?
I don't expect a utopian human-rights based approach on 90% of the nettlesome and difficult foreign-policy and domestic issues-- like AT&T's mulligan for the hopefully-ended and mostly-overlooked domestic-eavesdropping program on regular-citizens-- but I also didn't expect a coldly "real politik" Kissinger/Disraeli perspective on absolutely everything.
Except for hearing the soaring-rhetoric in Obama's speeches, where are the out-of-the-box policy-initiatives that take on old problems in daring and risky new ways?
For that's what has the power to inspire leaders and citizens in other-countries (even if these unexpectedly-daring proposals never get accomplished). Our power as a unilateral world-leader may be coming to an end, but the power of his example can set the stage for changes that finally take place decades from now (as Kennedy and Roosevelt's vision later proved).
Thank you.
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