Secretary Hagel to Resign amid Pressure from White House

 
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WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel handed in his resignation on Monday, the first cabinet-level casualty of the collapse of President Obama’s Democratic majority in the Senate and the struggles of his national security team to respond to an onslaught of global crises.

The president is to announce the resignation from the State Dining Room of the White House at around 11:15 a.m. Eastern time.

Administration officials said that Mr. Obama made the decision to remove Mr. Hagel, the sole Republican on his national security team, last Friday after a series of meetings between the two men over the past two weeks.

The officials characterized the decision as a recognition that the threat from the militant group Islamic State will require different skills from those that Mr. Hagel, who often struggled to articulate a clear viewpoint and was widely viewed as a passive defense secretary, was brought in to employ.

Mr. Hagel, a combat veteran who was skeptical about the Iraq war, came in to manage the Afghanistan combat withdrawal and the shrinking Pentagon budget in the era of budget sequestrations.

Now, however, the American military is back on a war footing, although it is a modified one. Some 3,000 American troops are being deployed in Iraq to help the Iraqi military fight the Sunni militants of the Islamic State, even as the administration struggles to come up with, and articulate, a coherent strategy to defeat the group in both Iraq and Syria.

“The next couple of years will demand a different kind of focus,” one administration official said, speaking on grounds of anonymity. He insisted that Mr. Hagel was not fired, saying that he initiated discussions about his future two weeks ago with the president, and that the two men mutually agreed that it was time for him to leave.

But Mr. Hagel’s aides had maintained in recent weeks that he expected to serve the full four years as defense secretary. His removal appears to be an effort by the White House to show that it is sensitive to critics who have pointed to stumbles in the government’s early response to several national security issues, including the Ebola crisis and the threat posed by the Islamic State.

Even before the announcement of Mr. Hagel’s removal, Obama officials were speculating on his possible replacement. At the top of the list are Michèle A. Flournoy, a former under secretary of defense; Senator Jack Reed, Democrat of Rhode Island and a former officer with the Army’s 82nd Airborne; and Ashton B. Carter, a former deputy secretary of defense.

A respected former senator who struck a friendship with Mr. Obama when they were both critics of the Iraq war from positions on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Mr. Hagel has nonetheless had trouble penetrating the tight team of former campaign aides and advisers who form Mr. Obama’s closely knit set of loyalists. Senior administration officials have characterized him as quiet during cabinet meetings; Mr. Hagel’s defenders said that he waited until he was alone with the president before sharing his views, the better to avoid leaks.

Whatever the case, Mr. Hagel struggled to fit in with Mr. Obama’s close circle and was viewed as never gaining traction in the administration after a bruising confirmation fight among his old Senate colleagues, during which he was criticized for seeming tentative in his responses to sharp questions.

He never really shed that pall after arriving at the Pentagon, and in the past few months he has largely ceded the stage to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, who officials said initially won the confidence of Mr. Obama with his recommendation of military action against the Islamic State.

In Mr. Hagel’s less than two years on the job, his detractors said he struggled to inspire confidence at the Pentagon in the manner of his predecessors, especially Robert M. Gates. But several of Mr. Obama’s top advisers over the past few months have also acknowledged privately that the president did not want another high-profile defense secretary in the mold of Mr. Gates, who went on to write a memoir of his years with Mr. Obama in which he sharply criticized the president. Mr. Hagel, they said, in many ways was exactly the kind of defense secretary whom the president, after battling the military during his first term, wanted.

Mr. Hagel, for his part, spent his time on the job largely carrying out Mr. Obama’s stated wishes on matters like bringing back American troops from Afghanistan and trimming the Pentagon budget, with little pushback. He did manage to inspire loyalty among enlisted soldiers and often seemed at his most confident when talking to troops or sharing wartime experiences as a Vietnam veteran.

But Mr. Hagel has often had problems articulating his thoughts — or administration policy — in an effective manner, and has sometimes left reporters struggling to describe what he has said in news conferences. In his side-by-side appearances with both General Dempsey and Secretary of State John Kerry, Mr. Hagel, a decorated Vietnam veteran and the first former enlisted combat soldier to be defense secretary, has often been upstaged.

He raised the ire of the White House in August as the administration was ramping up its strategy to fight the Islamic State, directly contradicting the president, who months before had likened the Sunni militant group to a junior varsity basketball squad. Mr. Hagel, facing reporters in his now-familiar role next to General Dempsey, called the Islamic State an “imminent threat to every interest we have,” adding, “This is beyond anything that we’ve seen.” White House officials later said they viewed those comments as unhelpful, although the administration still appears to be struggling to define just how large is the threat posed by the Islamic State.



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It was inevitable, the administration has had an appalling history of foreign policy.

Hagel "resigned" *wink*


Lemy the Lizerd | Heroic Unstoppable!
 
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>threat posed
>by the Islamic state

Holy fuck my sides.

If it was a genuine threat, the CIA wouldn't have kickstarted it in the first place.


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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet


 
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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.



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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet
Would you stop thinking along the arbitrary party lines for a fucking minute? Jesus fuck.

Obama is a hawk. This guy isn't. Obama wants to deal with this "threat" by making people die. So, naturally, Obama wants somebody who is good at organizing death.


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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.
It actually is. Obama talks all big about gridlock and wanting to work with others but this proves he can't tolerate the ideas of others that are not his. Instead of working on a plan with Hagel, he just fires him


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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.
It actually is. Obama talks all big about gridlock and wanting to work with others but this proves he can't tolerate the ideas of others that are not his. Instead of working on a plan with Hagel, he just fires him
Would you be saying the same if Ron Paul fired a hawk from his cabinet?

Or if Obama had fired Ben Bernanke?


 
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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.
It actually is. Obama talks all big about gridlock and wanting to work with others but this proves he can't tolerate the ideas of others that are not his. Instead of working on a plan with Hagel, he just fires him

Or, you know, as Lemy said: Hagel's ideas and strategies simply do not coincide with what the military feels is necessary.

This is not Obama saying "Fuck the Republicans", so kindly stop trying to make it out to be in hopes of an argument.


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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.
It actually is. Obama talks all big about gridlock and wanting to work with others but this proves he can't tolerate the ideas of others that are not his. Instead of working on a plan with Hagel, he just fires him

Or, you know, as Lemy said: Hagel's ideas and strategies simply do not coincide with what the military feels is necessary.

This is not Obama saying "Fuck the Republicans", so kindly stop trying to make it out to be in hopes of an argument.
Or you know, the purpose of government is to work together to form a plan that makes everybody happy? The military also feels a stronger and stable budget is necessary, so does that mean Democrats are wrong for wanting to limit it?

dat irony doe, considering my response is yours whenever Republicans don't pass a Democrat bill or wanting to repeal ObamaCare


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Guess I was wrong about Obama wanting to work with Republicans, seeing as he's firing the only one in his cabinet

That is totally logical thinking.
It actually is. Obama talks all big about gridlock and wanting to work with others but this proves he can't tolerate the ideas of others that are not his. Instead of working on a plan with Hagel, he just fires him
Would you be saying the same if Ron Paul fired a hawk from his cabinet?

Or if Obama had fired Ben Bernanke?
Yes


 
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Or you know, the purpose of government is to work together to form a plan that makes everybody happy?

Ideally, yes. Unfortunately, when faced with crises regarding Ebola in Africa, ISIS in Syria/Iraq, Russia and Ukraine - Hagel's strategies and beliefs simply did not reflect the ongoing problems in the world.

Numerous Presidents have let go of Secretaries when their policies have not been well received or have not fixed problems they are meant to fix. This is nothing new, so again, stop making it like it is something only Obama has done.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Or you know, the purpose of government is to work together to form a plan that makes everybody happy?
Um, no it isn't.

It's to provide stable, conservative governance. What makes people happy isn't necessarily what's best.

Regardless, you're completely ignoring that replacing somebody disagreeable with somebody more agreeable is a viable option to form a plan which makes everybody happy.
Last Edit: November 24, 2014, 11:54:22 AM by Meta Cognition