Presidential command: power, leadership and the making of foreign policy from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush.
Coffey, John W.
Presidential Command: Power, Leadership and the Making of Foreign
Policy from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush
Review by John W. Coffey, Ph.D.
Peter W. Rodman, Presidential Command: Power, Leadership and the
Making of Foreign Policy from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush, New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 2009; 368 pages; ISBN 978-0-307-26979-9; hardback,
$27.95
Presidential Command by the late Peter Rodman, a protege of Henry
Kissinger, provides an insider's account of foreign policy-making
in seven administrations. Having served in high position during five of
those administrations, Rodman, an unabashed advocate of presidential
authority, presents a personal perspective on the exercise of
presidential statecraft. In conclusion, he offers a primer of practical
lessons for future presidents.
Inheriting an NSC structure leaving policy implementation to the
State Department, Richard Nixon determined to run foreign policy from
the White House, using the NSC as the instrument of presidential
control. A "committee of two" in the White House, Nixon and
national security adviser Kissinger, would coordinate and implement
foreign policy.
This produced the notorious feud with Secretary of State Rogers,
judged by Rodman as weak and unable to impose presidential will on the
Foreign Service, as Kissinger asserted control over all official
communications and devised an elaborate, secret network of back-channels
centered on himself for Soviet affairs, China, SALT, and Vietman.
Kissinger's strength in bureaucratic struggles and with foreign
leaders derived from the President's authority. Although Nixon
possessed "the deepest intuition and shrewdest strategic
judgment" of any recent president, the exclusionary nature of his
centralized system, Rodman believes, does not furnish a model for future
presidents.
A self-confident, gregarious Gerald Ford adopted a model of cabinet
government, delegating responsibility to heavy-weight cabinet officers
loyal to his agenda. The "extreme collegiality" of the early
administration, however, fostered White House indiscipline. Mutual
confidence and candor existed between Ford and an initially dual-hatted
Secretary of State and security adviser Kissinger, though external
political forces buffeting the administration strained the relation.
Kissinger reconciled himself to Ford's appointment in 1975 of his
deputy, Brent Scowcroft, as security adviser, but Scowcroft's
adroit performance of "honest broker" smoothed collaboration
with the Secretary of State.
Wanting no repeat of Kissinger, Jimmy Carter initially welcomed
competition between the "counterweights" of security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. In time Carter,
dissatisfied with Vance's weakness and inability to steer State,
shifted to greater White House control and responsibility for
Brzezinski, although Brzezinski never received the full presidential
support Kissinger had.
The flaw of Carter's "balanced" system, argues
Rodman, lay in "the philosophical schizophrenia of the
president," often resulting in an incoherent splitting of the
difference between the hard Brzezinski and soft Vance. The fall of the
Shah revealed Carter's policy ambivalence, as the White House
failed to control State's policy implementation and Carter evaded
to the end the issue of the use of force.
Rodman "admires" Ronald Reagan, but faults The
Gipper's executive skill. Reagan too preferred cabinet government,
where cabinet officers, not the president's staffers, would be his
advisers and execute policy. The position of national security adviser
was downgraded. The system's looseness, Reagan's aversion to
personal confrontation with subordinates, and his detached management
style bred turmoil, policy confusion, and a protracted struggle between
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and Secretary of State George
Shultz. Like Carter's Iran policy, Reagan's muddled Lebanon
policy resulted from splitting the difference between conflicting
strategies.
Rodman credits Bush I with the "smoothest-run"
administration in his study. Here were a knowledgeable, experienced
President in command, loyal Secretaries of State and Defense carrying
out his policies, and security adviser Scowcroft serving as "honest
broker and coordinator" fully supported by the President. An open,
informal management style existed, with key subordinates having ready
access to the President. Oval Office meetings of the "Gang of
Eight" (Secretaries Baker and Cheney, Scowcroft, JCS Chairman Colin
Powell, COS John Sununu, Baker deputy Lawrence Eagleburger, Scowcroft
deputy Robert Gates, and Vice-President Quayle) replaced regular NSC
meetings.
Scowcroft was the "impresario and enforcer of this
process," where a spirit of trust prevailed. His qualities--as an
honest broker, with intellectual weight and managerial acumen--became
known as the "Scowcroft model." A Scowcroft innovation
retained through Bush II was the Principals Committee, an NSC of key
cabinet secretaries, minus the President, chaired by the security
adviser, to settle interagency disputes before issues moved to the
President.
Bill Clinton retained this structure, but his administration was
plagued by lack of sustained presidential engagement and undisciplined
proceedings, what Colin Powell likened to "graduate-student bull
sessions." Clinton's second term improved, when he delegated
to a strong individual (Robert Rubin in international economic policy,
Strobe Talbott in Russia policy, Richard Holbrooke in Bosnia, George
Mitchell in Northern Ireland), or was personally involved as at Camp
David II. Again, the lesson is that only direct presidential engagement
can impart coherence to the policy process.
Bush II intended a collegial process, like his father's, with
responsibility delegated to subordinates, but his CEO management style
prevented him from addressing divisions and ensuring policy consistency.
Rodman highly regards Colin Powell, whose deference to the Foreign
Service, however, put him at odds with the White House; Powell never
acquired a comfortable rapport with the boss. Though acknowledging
Vice-President Cheney's unusual influence in the Oval Office,
Rodman considers the Cheney-Rumsfeld "cabal" theory
overstated, with the President often switching sides and sometimes
deferring judgment altogether. Bush wanted a bureaucratic consensus to
emerge, but failed to make it happen.
The cardinal lesson from Rodman's thoughtful study is the
necessity of steady, personal presidential engagement in the policy
process. Institutional structures offer no substitute. Bureaucratic
consensus is a mirage; the President must decide key issues, then
delegate implementation to loyal subordinates. The security adviser must
check end-runs to the Oval Office, but secretaries need personal time
with the President; these separate dealings, therefore, should be
transparent to all concerned.
Rodman favors a system with a strong, loyal Secretary of State to
direct the Department. A security adviser on the Scowcroft model of
fairness and trust, the President's strong right arm, is needed to
protect the President's interests and oversee bureaucratic
performance. The old adage that "personnel is everything"
remains true. The paramount factor in government, Rodman maintains, is
the character of people, above all the Commander-in-Chief.
What are the early signs for the Obama administration? Retired
Marine General James Jones, the new security adviser, promises a
"dramatically different" NSC from its predecessors. (1) Jones
made clear his intention to run the process and be the primary conduit
of advice to Obama, eliminating divisive back-channels and pledging
transparency, with meeting agendas and results available to "the
whole community." Each Department will appoint a monitor of the NSC
to keep senior officials abreast of issues. NSC directorates will
oversee implementation of decisions.
Jones professes a spirit of collegiality, but plans to drive the
process. "I believe in collegiality ... in sounding out people and
getting them to participate," Jones states. Nevertheless, "The
most important thing is that you are in fact the coordinator and
you're the guy around which the meetings occur. When we chair a
principals meeting, I'm the chairman." (2)
Obama has created two types of national security orders:
presidential policy directives, and presidential study directives to
initiate policy reviews. Policy Directive 1 of February 13 adds the
Attorney General, Secretaries of Energy and Homeland Security, and UN
Ambassador to the formal NSC. International economic, counterterrorism,
and science and technology advisers will be "regular members,"
when their issues are on the agenda. A system of interagency committees
will coordinate analysis and reviews of issues "for consideration
by the more senior committees ... and to ensure timely responses to
decisions made by the President." (3) Study Directive 1 of February
23 orders an interagency review of the homeland security and
counterterrorism structures.
Time will tell how former law professor Obama and the retired
Marine General establish rapport and how Jones strikes all the delicate
balances needed to manage a "team of rivals." The chief
ingredient in maintaining these balances will be a condition of trust
among all the principals and a deft talent for discipline and anonymity
by the security adviser. As Brent Scowcroft once said, the adviser
"should be seen occasionally, heard even less." (4)
Notes
(1.) Karen DeYoung, "Obama's NSC Will Get New
Power," Washington Post (Feb. 8, 2009), A1.
(2.) Ibid.
(3.) Karen DeYoung, "National Security Structure Is Set,"
Washington Post (Feb. 27, 2009). A3.
(4.) Quoted in David Ignatius, "Welcome to the Toughest Job in
Town," Washington Post (Mar. 1, 2009), B4. See also Ivo H. Daalder and I.M. Destler, "In the Shadow of the Oval Office: The Next
National Security Adviser," Foreign Affairs, 88(Jan./Feb., 2009),
pp. 114-129.
About the author: John W. Coffey received a Ph.D. in American
history from Stanford University and taught for 20 years. He served in
the Office of the Secretary of Defense from 1986-88 and as a civil
servant at the Commerce and State Departments for 15 years, retiring
from State in 2005. He has written widely on foreign and defense policy.