Gulf News

How Obama pushed Hagel out after stifling Pentagon

WHITE HOUSE CONTROLS DILUTE CABINET MEMBERS’ AUTHORITY

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President Barack Obama pushed Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel out of his job yesterday after less than 21 months, with White House officials citing disagreeme­nts over Iraq and Syria policy.

Hagel, who had grown increasing­ly frustrated with tight White House management of policy, was ready to go anyway, a US defence official said. He resigned without a fight.

The Vietnam veteran’s departure spotlights how one of Washington’s most powerful jobs - overseeing the world’s strongest military and a budget of more than $ 600 billion ( Dh2.2 trillion) - has faded in the Obama era. Under Obama, the strict White House control often has left Hagel and other Cabinet members with limited authority and autonomy.

“The White House has really wanted to minimise the influence of the Pentagon on policy,” said Rosa Brooks, who was counsellor to then-Undersecre­tary of Defence for Policy Michele Flournoy during Obama’s first term.

Underlying tension

Like his immediate predecesso­rs at the Pentagon, Robert Gates and Leon Panetta, Hagel chafed at the way a small cadre of Obama loyalists centralise­d power in the White House. When Obama backed off a threat to bomb Syria last year, he made the decision on a walk with his chief of staff, Denis McDonough. Hagel was informed of the decision later.

Tension between Hagel and White House aides got so bad, the defence official said, that Hagel would often phone Obama after the meetings to make sure his voice was heard.

Now, the challenge for the White House is finding a successor who’s willing to take a relatively weak throne and content to avoid dissent. That candidate will also have the task of changing the Pentagon even as career bureaucrat­s know there’s little time left under Obama to do so.

“Chuck was frustrated with aspects of the administra­tion’s national security policy and decision- making process,” Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican, said in a statement Monday. “His predecesso­rs have spoken about the excessive micro- management they faced from the White House and how that made it more difficult to do their jobs successful­ly. Chuck’s situation was no different.”

NSC staff

The White House’s National Security Council staff, designed to coordinate policy among the various federal agencies, has grown substantia­lly under Obama - to roughly 270 people from about 200 under President George W. Bush, according to Reuters.

Its size and physical proximity to the White House, just across a small access road, have given it greater influence than Cabinet agencies in the developmen­t, and sometimes the implementa­tion, of policy, according to a former defence official who requested anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.

The defence budget was another source of friction between Hagel and the White House.

 ?? AP ?? Parting of ways President Barack Obama ( left) embraces Chuck Hagel after speaking about defence secretary’s resignatio­n at the White House in Washington on Monday.
AP Parting of ways President Barack Obama ( left) embraces Chuck Hagel after speaking about defence secretary’s resignatio­n at the White House in Washington on Monday.

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