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    Elisabeth Bumiller
    NY Times
    July 18, 2008

    COMMENT: In addition to the ‘dream team’ of CFR war-mongers Obama announced to his National Security working group in recent weeks are Colin ‘yellow cake’ Powell (along with Robert Gates, who Obama may retain as Defense Secretary), Hillary’s would-have-been Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke and former Clinton administration adviser Dennis Ross.

    WASHINGTON — Every day around 8 a.m., foreign policy aides at Senator Barack Obama’s Chicago campaign headquarters send him two e-mails: a briefing on major world developments over the previous 24 hours and a set of questions, accompanied by suggested answers, that the candidate is likely to be asked about international relations during the day.

    One recent Q. & A. asked, for example, whether Mr. Obama supported the decision by Iraq’s prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, to include a timetable for American troop withdrawal in any new security agreements with the United States. The answer, provided to Mr. Obama with bullet points, was yes — or “a genuine opportunity,” as he put it in a speech on Iraq this week.

    Behind the e-mail messages is a tight-knit group of aides supported by a huge 300-person foreign policy campaign bureaucracy, organized like a mini State Department, to assist a candidate whose limited national security experience remains a concern to many voters.

    “It is unwieldy, no question,” said Denis McDonough, 38, Mr. Obama’s top foreign policy aide, speaking of an infrastructure that has been divided into 20 teams based on regions and issues, and that has recently absorbed, with some tensions, the top foreign policy advisers from Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential campaign. “But an administration is unwieldy, too. We also know that it’s messier when you don’t get as much information as you can.”

    election politics   A Cast of 300 Advises Obama on Foreign Policy
    election politics   A Cast of 300 Advises Obama on Foreign Policy
    election politics   A Cast of 300 Advises Obama on Foreign Policy

    The group is on the spot this week as Mr. Obama is planning to make his first overseas foray as the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, with voters at home and leaders abroad watching closely to see how he handles himself on the global stage.

    Unlike George W. Bush, who entered the presidential race in 2000 with scant exposure to national security issues, Mr. Obama has served since his election to the Senate in 2004 on the Foreign Relations Committee and has had a running tutorial from aides steeped in the issues. His campaign says that he is well prepared and that he often alters and expands on the talking points provided to him by his foreign policy advisers.

    Most of the core members of his team served in government during President Bill Clinton’s administration and by and large were junior to the advisers who worked on Mrs. Clinton’s campaign for the Democratic nomination. But they remain in charge within the campaign even as it takes on more senior figures from the Clinton era, like two former secretaries of state, Madeleine K. Albright and Warren Christopher, and are positioned to put their own stamp on the party’s foreign policy.

    Most of them, like the candidate they are working for, distinguished themselves from Mrs. Clinton’s foreign policy camp by early opposition to the Iraq war. They also tend to be more liberal and to emphasize using the “soft power” of diplomacy and economic aid to try to advance the interests of the United States. Still, their positions fall well within centrist Democratic foreign policy thinking, and none of the deep policy fissures that have divided the Republicans into two camps, the neoconservatives and the so-called pragmatists, have opened.

    Mr. Obama’s core team is led by Susan E. Rice, an assistant secretary of state for African affairs in the Clinton administration, who has pushed for a tougher response to the crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan, and Anthony Lake, Mr. Clinton’s first national security adviser, who was criticized for the administration’s failure to confront the genocide in Rwanda in 1994 and now acknowledges the inaction as a major mistake.

    The core group also includes Gregory B. Craig, a former top official in the Clinton State Department who served as the president’s lawyer during his impeachment trial; Richard J. Danzig, a Navy secretary in the Clinton administration; Mark W. Lippert, Mr. Obama’s former Senate foreign policy adviser, who just returned from a Navy tour of duty in Iraq; and Mr. McDonough.

    Mr. McDonough and Mr. Lippert are paid by the campaign and based in Chicago, and the rest are outside advisers who volunteer their time from Washington.

    The group no longer includes Samantha Power, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Harvard human rights expert who resigned in March after she was quoted calling Mrs. Clinton a “monster.” But Mr. Lake still talks to Ms. Power, and Mr. Obama sent a long personal tribute that was read at her wedding in Ireland this month.

    Mr. Obama’s Republican rival, Senator John McCain of Arizona, has a far smaller and looser foreign policy advisory operation, about 75 people in all, and none are organized into teams. In 2004, the Democratic presidential nominee, Senator John Kerry, had a foreign policy structure similar in scale to Mr. Obama’s, but it had limited influence on the candidate, who had spent 20 years in the Senate, former advisers said. Mr. Obama is not yet receiving the government intelligence briefing that is typically made available to a presidential candidate upon becoming his party’s nominee.

    Mr. Obama’s infrastructure funnels hundreds of e-mail messages and reams of position papers and talking points each day to members of the core group, who in turn seek advice or make requests for more information to team members down the line. Dennis Ross, the Middle East envoy for Mr. Clinton and the first President Bush and a member of the Obama campaign’s Middle East team, is frequently asked by Ms. Rice, Mr. Lake or Mr. McDonough for help on framing Mr. Obama’s comments on Iran’s nuclear program and its potential threat to Israel.

    “They’ve asked for substantive help: ‘Can I take a look at language on Iran?’ ” Mr. Ross said. “Or sometimes I’ve been asked questions to explain the administration’s approach on Iran.” Mr. Ross participated in a conference call last week with Mr. Obama and other advisers to prepare for the senator’s foreign trip, and he will travel with Mr. Obama in Israel and the West Bank city of Ramallah and at other stops. Mr. Ross described Mr. Obama in the conference call as focused on “drilling down” into the issues on the trip.

    Another person who has contributed outside advice is former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, whom Mr. Obama has been wooing. Mr. Powell, a Republican, has a friendship of decades with Mr. McCain, but friends say he has felt excluded from Mr. McCain’s foreign policy operation and was impressed when Mr. Obama called on him in June. Mr. Powell also met around the same time with Mr. McCain.

    From day to day, the main point of contact with Mr. Obama and his foreign policy team is Mr. McDonough, who is soon to be joined in Chicago by Mr. Lippert. “If there’s something big in the morning, we will either e-mail or call Obama,” said Mr. Lippert, who performed a similar job, although on a smaller scale, when he was Mr. Obama’s foreign policy adviser in the Senate. “So instead of having 20 people at your fingertips, you have 300. The pressure is there, the time is much shorter, but the principle is the same — lining up the calls, briefing the candidate, e-mails, op-eds, statements.”

    Out in the netherworld of the 300, advisers often say they are unclear about what happens to all the policy paragraphs they churn out on request. “It’s all mysterious what we send him and what gets to him,” said Michael A. McFaul, a Russia scholar at Stanford University who leads the Russia and Eurasia team for the Obama campaign.

    Other team leaders include Ivo H. Daalder, a scholar at the Brookings Institution who has organized his 40-member nuclear nonproliferation team into eight working groups, and Philip H. Gordon, another scholar at the institution, who is in charge of Mr. Obama’s Europe team.

    Although Mr. Obama’s team has yet to show any public evidence of deep policy divisions, it has its share of personal tensions, not least those born of integrating Mrs. Clinton’s former advisers into the effort. In that process, the old Clinton administration hierarchy has been turned upside down.

    One person who is not a team leader — and who was not included in a 13-member “senior working group” that the Obama campaign announced last month — is Richard Holbrooke, a United Nations ambassador under Mr. Clinton who was mentioned as a potential secretary of state if Mrs. Clinton had won the presidency. Mr. Holbrooke has long had a rivalry with Mr. Lake, who was widely criticized in Washington for his performance as national security adviser in the Clinton White House.

    The Obama campaign has since said that Mr. Holbrooke, who mediated an end to the war in Bosnia in 1995, is on the team. But Mr. Holbrooke, who declined to comment, has found himself in the position of a general from a defeated army who must now seek peace.

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    Comment Rules

    19 Responses to “A Cast of 300 Advises Obama on Foreign Policy”

    1. Rittmeister_ Says:

      I wonder how many advisors Chavez needs? Probably zero :)
      So if we get Obama, we get the CHANGE of having the usual suspects running the government.
      What’s that guy here for anyway? Maybe he’s better at reading from a script than Bush…
      Who needs more change?

    2. totalyunaware Says:

      interesting Obamba’s affiliation with Chicago…what a perfect event it would be if Chicago were hit from some supposed terrorist attack. Obamba would be right there to rein in power out of chaos

    3. raleigh Says:

      Jesus 300! What are they gonna be his version of the Spartans! And all of the same ol’ faces too, huh? Jesus, what’s all the fuss Bill and Hill? Your advisers will be running the country. Crap! We can either have WWIII with McCain, or the same ol’ bunch that took us upto 911. Something’s coming, I can feel it… Get prepared while you still can.

    4. The Ghost of Tom Joad Says:

      The Committee of 300, or a committee of three hundred. Supposedly the story goes that 300 men and their families, really run the world.

    5. Rev. WarBucks Says:

      Anyone telling Red neck jokes is suspect. If you wear a “gitter done ball cap” you mite be cut down and barried in a plastic coffin.

    6. The Spartan Patriot Says:

      Only 300 run the world?

      Well then, all I need is 30 Spartan Patriots!

      HOO_YAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Today is “New World Order Saturday” at “The American Voice” radio. Tune in and listen to the various lectures on “One World Government”.

      http://www.theamericanvoice.com

    7. Jive Mothafacko Says:

      Sounds to me like we’re gonna get ‘change.’ Change in our pockets after we switch our dollars for Ameros. Change our way of living to a completely despotic rule. What’s worse, is since I have a Southern accent up here in Chicago, people think I’m a racist when I warn them about Obama. Frightening…I give up…

    8. h20 Says:

      LOL… yeah right! Obama’s location kept secret because he’s on a foreign policy mission. We all know where you are Racky….. it’s out West, surrounded by trees….. and a big-a$$ statue of an owl.

      Yup, Barack is using his little foreign policy trip as a cover for his chummy vacation away from the masses at the Grove. Can I get an amen?

    9. rebel Says:

      WRITE IN RON PAUL

    10. david welch Says:

      i supported obama because he said he was anti war …. but after his comments about a national civilian security force, i flipped,,,,, i just read “the rise and fall of the third reich”

    11. Sean Henderson Says:

      we all know what we have to do to take back our government

    12. realitycheck Says:

      too many zionists for my comfort. how far will he go to please aipac?

    13. jimbob Says:

      I think jacque fresco can word this better than me.
      http://youtube.com/watch?v=4m3wzTULrWQ

    14. jimbob Says:

      I think jacque fresco on youtube can explain this better.
      watch?v=4m3wzTULrWQ

    15. yellowhak1 Says:

      log onto yahoo, news articles appearing stating what alex has been saying all along. of course news media spinning it to their pathetic advantage. talks of us withdrawing troops out of iraq only to continue in afghanistan than onto iran. skies the limit!

    16. To Uphold the Supreme Law of the Land Says:

      So Obama represents and wants change does he…hmmm? How about starting with dismantling the illegal Federal Reserve and Federal Income tax…now that would be change!

    17. HillbillyJihad&TheBubbaLiberationFront Says:

      f--- Colin Powell…traitor to the CONSTITUTION!!! Get the rope!!!

    18. Scott Webb Says:

      I just found this on youtube

      1/10 – SKULL & BONES: The Catholic Connection……i wish i could find the whole movie in a oner……but you can still view it in all 10 bits…..Awesome Anthony J Hilder…..strikes again for the good guys :)
      http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=aHWPHVNs0w8

    19. roaddog Says:

      Black O’Bastard is just setting his regime of puppets up to do his bidding. Thats all. I wonder how many soup tasters he has?