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TOPIC: Gates, Clinton oppose cuts to State Dept. budget (Christian Science Monitor 4/23/10)


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Gates, Clinton oppose cuts to State Dept. budget (Christian Science Monitor 4/23/10)
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http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Foreign-Policy/2010/0423/Gates-Clinton-oppose-cuts-to-State-Department-budget

Hillary and Robert Gates really seem to work well together. I feel kind of sorry for him, being the only Republican in the administration. He and Hillary are both committed to keeping this country safe and they don't have an easy job, having to put up with Zero and all. And now the Senate wants to reduce the State Department's $$$.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton did not stand alone when she objected this week to a Senate Budget Committee plan to take much of a nearly $10 billion cut in President Obama’s proposed discretionary spending for next year from State Department and other international programs.

Joining her was Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who in recent years has fought tirelessly for increasing the US government’s civilian international capacities. His argument: For the good of America’s long-term national security, the Pentagon must be able to relinquish some of the nation-building and other international development duties it has taken on by default.

More than perhaps any other two secretaries of Defense and State, Mr. Gates and Mrs. Clinton have worked as a team to promote the concept of “smart power” and the 21st-century’s demands for more effective and coordinated military and civilian operations. “The two of them together continue to emphasize that as we have a balanced national security strategy, we need to have a balanced national security budget to support that strategy,” says State Department spokesman Philip Crowley.

That perspective is clear in Gates’s defense this week of fully funded State Department and other civilian international budgets. In a letter to Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) Gates hammered at what has become his signature theme, that civilian foreign affairs are “a critical component of an integrated and effective national security program.”

Calling full funding of both national defense and foreign affairs budgets “necessary for our national security and for ensuring our continued leadership in the world,” Gates said the president’s budget reflects “overall national security requirements” and the mutual dependency of military and civilian operations.


In her letter to the Budget Committee, Clinton notes that more than two-thirds of the proposed increase would go directly to programs in the war-on-terrorism “frontline states” of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq. The understood message: These are programs, like $1.5 billion a year in civilian development assistance to Pakistan, that you in the Senate have recently mandated.

She also picks up on Gates’s argument about the growing hand-in-glove coordination of the work carried out by the military and civilian diplomats and development experts. “Our [civilian] missions are increasingly integrated with those of our Defense Department counter-parts,” she says. “Cuts to the civilian components can no longer be seen in isolation or having little impact on our national security strategy.”


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i can see lack of funds for Hillary to do the job right as a good way (excuse) for stepping down as SOS

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Amy Dugan
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