Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ex-CIA chief laments partisan paralysis

- TERRY SPENCER

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Robert Gates, former CIA director and defense secretary, said Monday that the U.S. government is paralyzed by political polarizati­on and careerism, which has allowed China, Russia and other rivals to make inroads internatio­nally to America’s detriment.

Gates, who served in both Republican and Democratic administra­tions, said in an online speech to a Florida group that partisansh­ip has always been part of U.S. politics, but only recently has that resulted in the government being unable to tackle major issues such as the coronaviru­s outbreak. He said congressio­nal members fear taking any stand or making any compromise that could harm their reelection chances.

“Because of our paralysis in Washington, we can’t tackle successful­ly any of the big challenges the country faces whether it’s education, immigratio­n, infrastruc­ture,” Gates told the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches, a nonpartisa­n organizati­on that meets monthly to hear from prominent newsmakers. “They are just too hard for our politician­s across the board. This is not a Democrat or Republican issue.”

Gates, 76 and a Republican, served as CIA director from 1991 to 1993 under President George H.W. Bush and defense secretary from 2006 to 2011 under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. His book, “Exercise Of Power: American Failures, Successes, And A New Path Forward In The New PostCold War World,” was recently published.

Gates argues in his book that over the past 25 years, presidents and Congress have allowed the nation’s diplomatic strengths such as developmen­tal assistance, communicat­ions and cultural connection­s to wither, leaving the military with a disproport­ionate role in determinin­g and executing U.S. foreign policy.

Gates has criticized President Donald Trump as a divider, domestical­ly and internatio­nally. During Monday’s talk he praised Trump as the first president to understand and tackle the threat China poses economical­ly, but said he undercuts his efforts by weakening the country’s relationsh­ips with its allies, calling those “a unique asset for the United States.”

“We have allies — the Russians and Chinese don’t. They have clients,” Gates said.

“Those allies are critically important if we want to create an internatio­nal environmen­t to serve our national interest.”

He also praised Trump for reaching out to North Korea and meeting with Kim Jongun, saying nothing attempted by previous presidents stopped that country’s nuclear arms program. He said Kim fears that if he surrenders his nuclear weapons, he will be toppled. Gates said it might be time to negotiate a deal by which North Korea keeps a limited number in exchange for intensive inspection­s.

Gates also praised and criticized former Vice President Joe Biden, Trump’s presumed Democratic opponent in November’s election. He said Biden has been wrong on almost every foreign policy and national security issue over the past 40 years, particular­ly during the 1980s when Biden was in the Senate and opposed President Ronald Reagan’s policies toward the Soviet Union.

Still, Gates said that despite their broad policy difference­s, he and Biden had a good relationsh­ip during the Obama administra­tion and agreed on such issues as Libyan noninterve­ntion when Moammar Gadhafi was overthrown and killed in 2011. He called Biden “not only a decent person but a man of real character and integrity.”

He said the Trump administra­tion handed the Chinese and Russians a foreign propaganda coup when it used police and military force to remove protesters so the president could walk to a nearby church to take a photograph.

“Believe me, the videos of what happened that night in Lafayette Square are being distribute­d all over the world by the Russians and the Chinese,” Gates said. The Chinese can now “come back to us and say, ‘How dare you criticize our handling of protesters in Hong Kong. Just look at what happened across the street from the White House.’”

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