Monday, November 23, 2020
As Biden Taps Blinken as Secretary of State, Critics Denounce Support for Invasions of Iraq and Libya
"In
the U.S., there is no accountability for supporting the worst foreign policy
disaster in modern history. Only rewards."
Anthony Blinken attends a press conference on August 10, 2016 in
Washington, D.C. (Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)
With the upper ranks of President-elect Joe Biden's foreign
policy team beginning to take shape after new reporting indicated he plans to nominate
long-time adviser Antony Blinken as secretary of state, progressives raised
alarm over Blinken's support for the disastrous 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq and
the 2011 assault on Libya as well as his recent consulting work of behalf of corporate
clients in the tech, finance, and arms industries.
Blinken served as deputy national security adviser and deputy
secretary of state in the Obama administration and, as the Washington
Post reported Sunday, "has been
described as having a centrist view of the world" and "has also
supported interventionist positions."
"He once broke with Biden and supported military action in
Libya, for example," the Post noted, referring to the
Obama White House's catastrophic decision to join with NATO to bomb that country, an armed intervention that
helped unleash a violent civil war that is still ongoing.
When it came to Syria policy under Obama, Blinken is also
reported to have supported more aggressive military measures against the
government of President Bashar al-Assad and more recently has indicated that the Biden
administration would opt for leaving U.S. troops in the war-torn country.
When Biden, then a senator and chairman of the powerful Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, voted in 2002 to authorize the Bush
administration's disastrous invasion of Iraq—a decision he has since described as a mistake—Blinken
was the Democratic staff director of the committee. The Intercept's
Ryan Grim reported last July that Blinken
"helped craft Biden's own support for the Iraq War"; speaking to
the New York Times earlier this year, Blinken characterized the vote to invade Iraq
as "a vote for tough diplomacy."
"So we will have a president who supported the invasion of
Iraq, and a secretary of state (Tony Blinken) who supported the invasion of
Iraq," tweeted Medea Benjamin,
co-founder of anti-war group CodePink. "In the U.S., there is no
accountability for supporting the worst foreign policy disaster in modern
history. Only rewards."
Biden's choice of Blinken—expected to be announced publicly on
Tuesday along with a slate of additional nominees—was not universally
criticized by progressives. Matt Duss, foreign policy adviser for Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.), called Blinken "a good choice."
"Tony has the strong confidence of the president-elect and
the knowledge and experience for the important work of rebuilding U.S.
diplomacy," said Duss. "It will also be a new and great thing to have
a top diplomat who has regularly engaged with progressive grassroots."
After leaving the Obama administration, Blinken in 2017
co-founded the consultancy firm WestExec Advisors with Michèle Flournoy, who
is believed to be a leading
candidate to serve as Biden's defense [sic] secretary. As The
American Prospect reported in July:
WestExec would only divulge that it began working with
"Fortune 100 types," including large U.S. tech; financial services,
including global-asset managers; aerospace and defense; emerging U.S. tech; and
nonprofits.
The Prospect can confirm that one of
those clients is the Israeli artificial-intelligence company Windward. With
surveillance software that tracks ships in real time, two former Israeli naval
intelligence officers established the company in 2010...
Despite multiple requests, neither the firm nor the Biden
campaign would provide WestExec Advisors' client list. "Transparency is
very important to us," said a Biden spokesperson. Blinken had recused
himself from work at WestExec, according to the campaign, yet his profile
remains on the consultancy's website.
Biden's reported selection of Blinken, and potential selection
of Flournoy, to serve in two of his administration's top foreign policy roles
is likely to draw rebuke from progressives who have demanded that the
president-elect assemble a cabinet committed to peace and diplomacy and free
from the corrupting influence of weapons manufacturers, defense contractors,
and other powerful corporate interests.
"Biden has been facing calls from Democratic lawmakers and progressive advocacy groups to end the revolving
door between government and the defense [sic] industry," The Daily
Poster's Julia Rock and Andrew Perez noted Monday morning.
"One-third of the members of Biden transition's Department of Defense
[sic] agency review team were most recently employed by 'organizations,
think tanks, or companies that either directly receive money from the
weapons industry, or are part of this industry,' according to reporting from In These
Times."
"Meanwhile," Rock and Perez added, "defense [sic]
executives have been boasting about their close relationship with Biden
and expressing confidence that there will not be
much change in Pentagon policy."
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), the first vice chair of the
Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC), pointed out on Twitter that, similar to Blinken, "Flournoy
supported the war in Iraq and Libya, criticized Obama on Syria, and helped
craft the surge in Afghanistan."
"I want to support the president's picks," added
Khanna. "But will Flournoy now commit to a full withdrawal from
Afghanistan and a ban on arms sales to the Saudis to end the Yemen war?"
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), also a member of the CPC, said in response to Khanna that the "bigger question is
will Biden commit to that."
"Ultimately," said Omar, "it will be Biden's
foreign policy that his administration will execute."
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"The
master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought
the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while
the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially
their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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