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Thread: Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State

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    Default Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State

    Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?


    Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) looks up during a Veterans Day event at the
    Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum in New York City. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)


    By Al Kamen and Philip Rucker

    There's increasing chatter in political circles that the Obama camp is not overly happy with the usual suspects for secretary of state these days and that the field might be expanding somewhat beyond Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Gov. Bill Richardson (D-N.M.), Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) and maybe former Democratic senator Sam Nunn of Georgia.

    There's talk, indeed, that Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) may now be under consideration for the post. Her office referred any questions to the Obama transition; Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor declined to comment.

    The pick of the former presidential contender and Senate Armed Services Committee member would go a long way toward healing any remaining divisions within the Democratic Party after the divisive primaries. Also, Clinton has long been known for her work on international women's issues and human rights. The former first lady could also enhance Obama's efforts to restore U.S. standing amongst allies worldwide.

    And Obama could put her in his speed-dial for a 3 a.m. phone call every morning.

    http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the...l?hpid=topnews

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Hillary Clinton emerges as State Dept candidate

    Fri Nov 14, 2008 11:30am EST














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    By Steve Holland

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - Sen. Hillary Clinton emerged on Thursday as a candidate to be U.S. secretary of state for Barack Obama, months after he defeated her in an intense contest for the Democratic presidential nomination.

    Putting Clinton, wife of former President Bill Clinton, in the position could help heal whatever lingering divisions remain in the Democratic Party after her bitter battle with Obama.

    Obama passed over Clinton as his vice presidential running mate in favor of Sen. Joe Biden, a decision that angered her ardent supporters and widened a rift in the party that Obama and Clinton later worked hard to heal.

    Her selection as top U.S. diplomat could also mean a more hawkish foreign policy than that advocated by Obama during his presidential campaign. On the campaign trail, Clinton was more reluctant than Obama to commit to a firm timetable for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq.

    But both Obama and Clinton were adamant about improving the image of the United States abroad and correcting what they considered the "failed policies" of the outgoing Bush administration.

    NBC News quoted an adviser as saying Clinton had flown to Chicago, where Obama has an office, on Thursday on personal business. Her office would say only that she had no official business on Thursday.

    Neither her aides nor aides to President-elect Obama would say whether she was interviewed for the job by Obama, who spent a great part of the day behind closed doors in transition meetings in Chicago.

    "Any speculation about cabinet or other administration appointments is really for President-elect Obama's transition team to address," said Clinton's senior adviser, Philippe Reines.

    NBC News and The Washington Post reported that Clinton was under consideration for the top U.S. diplomatic position.

    EXPANDED SEARCH?

    This would mean Obama was expanding his search beyond other candidates mentioned for the job, such as Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, a Democrat who lost the 2004 presidential election to George W. Bush, and Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican who backed Obama over Republican John McCain this year.

    CNN reported that on Monday night, while walking into an awards ceremony in New York, Clinton was asked if she would consider taking a post in the Obama administration. It did not sound like she ruled it out.

    "I am happy being a senator from New York, I love this state and this city. I am looking at the long list of things I have to catch up on and do. But I want to be a good partner and I want to do everything I can to make sure his agenda is going to be successful," Clinton said.

    The former first lady had argued during the Democratic primary campaign that Obama was too inexperienced to be president. But they mended fences and during the Democratic National Convention in Denver, she declared that "Barack Obama is my candidate and he must be our president."

    Analyst Paul Light of New York University's John Brademas Center for the Study of Congress said picking Clinton would mean Obama was serious about reaching across the party divide.

    On the other hand, he said: "To put her in the competition with several others and pick somebody other than Hillary Clinton after you've floated her name is to have a repeat of the spring and summer division and raise questions about Obama's seriousness about healing the division within the party."

    Clinton was at first considered the shoo-in to win the Democratic nomination only to watch the 47-year-old Illinois senator defeat her in a series of decisive battles.

    Whether Clinton would want the position was immediately debated on cable television talk shows. After all, she wanted to be president, and why would she settle for anything less?

    "I think she has her sights set higher than that," said Stephen Hayes, a columnist for the Weekly Standard Magazine, on CNN.

    On the other hand, Obama won election over McCain decisively and if he is successful in his first term, he very well could win again in 2012, probably putting the presidency out of reach for Clinton, who is now 61.

    As U.S. first lady Clinton devoted a great deal of time to the rights of women around the world, often traveling the globe with her daughter, Chelsea.

    As a presidential candidate, she argued for putting greater U.S. emphasis on defeating the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and in ensuring nuclear weapons do not spread.

    (Additional reporting by Vicki Allen, Jackie Frank and JoAnne Allen, editing by Jackie Frank)

    © Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

    http://www.reuters.com/article/topNe...opNews&sp=true

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    November 14, 2008
    Why Hillary will be our Next Secretary of State

    Marc Sheppard
    Was there a deal struck months ago to get the Clintons on board? Perhaps -- But that's not what makes this a sure thing.


    Both Obama and Clinton aides have been ducking questions ever since rumors that Hillary was being considered for State began flying yesterday. Clinton's team insisted that questions about Cabinet or other administration appointments be addressed by Obama's transition team. And when asked yesterday about a possible Chicago meeting planned between the two former rivals, Obama press secretary designate Robert Gates played just as coy by responding "We're not going to discuss any meeting he has about appointments."


    It's now been verified that there was indeed such a meeting. But of much greater importance is this: On today's Morning Joe, MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell confirmed that two Obama advisors had named Hillary Clinton among those on the very short list for Secretary of State.


    And that's what clinches it.


    Given the bad blood generated first by a contentious primary and then by what Hillary loyalists regarded as a back-stabbing Obama VP selection, this would be no time to tease the troops Clinton helped ease.


    In 2004, John Kerry managed 51% of the female vote. In 2000, Al Gore got 54%. Having topped both with 56% of voting women supporting him on Election Day, Obama knows better than to raise the hopes of the fairer sex -- particularly Hillary stalwarts -- only to crush them once again.


    This is a done deal.

    http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/...ur_next_s.html

    He certainly owes her something.....
    Jag

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Cabinet post for Clinton roils Obamaland
    By: Ben Smith
    November 18, 2008 02:58 PM EST


    Barack Obama's serious flirtation with his one-time rival, Hillary Clinton, over the post of secretary of State has been welcomed by everyone from Henry Kissinger to Bill Clinton as an effective, grand gesture by the president-elect.

    It's not playing quite as well, however, in some precincts of Obamaland. From his supporters on the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, to campaign aides of the soon-to-be commander-in-chief, there's a sense of ambivalence about giving a top political plum to a woman they spent 18 months hammering as the compromised standard-bearer of an era that deserves to be forgotten.

    "These are people who believe in this stuff more than Barack himself does," said a Democrat close to Obama's campaign. "These guys didn't put together a campaign in order to turn the government over to the Clintons."

    An overlooked theme in Obama's primary victory was his belief that the Clinton legacy was not, as the Clintons imagined, a pure political positive. The Obama campaign had no compunctions about poking holes in that legacy and even sent out mailings stressing the downside of the last "8 years of the Clintons" – enraging the former president in particular.

    And the clearest opposition to the Clinton appointment comes from Obama's backers on the left of his own party, whose initial support for him was motivated in part by a distaste for the Clinton dynasty, and who now view her reemergence with some dismay.

    "There's always a risk of a Cabinet member freelancing and that risk is enhanced by the fact that Hillary has her own public and her own celebrity and that she comes attached to Bill," said Robert Kuttner, a Clinton critic and co-editor of the American Prospect whose new book, Obama's Challenge, implores the president-elect to adopt an expansive liberal agenda. "The other question is the old rule – never hire somebody you can't fire. What happens if her views and his views don't mesh?"

    "The silver lining, for those of us who are skeptical, is that it drastically limits the number of other Clinton administration alums that he can appoint, and that's a blessing," Kuttner said.
    See Also





    Kuttner hastened to add that Clinton is "very smart" and capable, and that her appointment would be "greeted very well worldwide. And other Democratic foreign policy thinkers who are eager to work in, or with, the Obama administration declined to comment on the record, though they noted that foreign policy was an area that marked some of the deepest disagreements between Clinton and Obama.

    Some key Obama-Clinton differences: Whether to meet face-to-face with leaders of hostile regimes (he was more open to the idea than she was) and her vote to authorize the war in Iraq.

    "The specific policy area at issue seems to be one in which the two of them aren't all that well-aligned," wrote the liberal blogger Matthew Yglesias.

    On Capitol Hill, however, even some of the left’s most normally unshrinking violets publicly backed a plan that appears to be almost a fait accompli.

    "Sen. Clinton is one of the brightest people in Congress and she would be an excellent choice," Vermont's independent senator, Bernie Sanders, told Politico through a spokesman.

    Inside the campaign, a prominent Democrat said, Obama's decision was also greeted with ambivalence – though his aides have, as usual, moved into a united front in public on the topic.

    During the primary, top aides like David Plouffe and Robert Gibbs developed a particular distaste for all things Clinton, one that filtered down through the campaign. So the transition from viewing Hillary Clinton
    as a relic of a drama-filled Democratic past to the top choice to run the foreign policy of an Obama administration has been difficult for some campaign veterans, to say the least.

    The wisdom of an Obama/Clinton team of rivals seems to be viewed with even more skepticism by the campaign’s rank and file. One Obama insider said that while Obama's senior staff has come around to acknowledging the power of a Clinton choice, supporters have not.

    "During the campaign there was a lot of agreement and correspondence about how the grassroots felt about the Clintons and how the Obama leadership felt," he said. "There's a bit of a divergence now. They're confused that the guy they elected . . . because we need to go in a different direction on the world stage" might choose a secretary of state with whom he had some of his sharpest foreign policy disagreements during the primary campaign.

    Obama's blog network on My.BarackObama.com has been buzzing with both sides of the argument since hints emerged last week of a surprise Clinton choice. A representative heading: "no hillary for secretary of state why???"

    More common inside Obama's circle is a grasp of the effective politics, and a sense that she'd be good at the job – though that somewhat grudging acknowledgment doesn't extend to a particularly warm
    embrace of the defeated primary candidate.

    "I can't stand her – but I think she's a great choice," said another Obama insider.

    Clinton seems poised to take the job, as both sides have steadily shared with reporters the details of an unusually – for Obama – public process. Democrats on both sides said that the remaining obstacle is
    working out the details of an arrangement that would allow the former president to maintain a public role while ending his dealings with foreign governments and his foundation's financial transactions with
    public and private foreign policy players.

    Members of Clinton's circle say they've felt little resistance from Obama's aides as the two sides work out the details of what could one of the great political deals of the century, if something short of a
    love affair.

    "They are being very matter of fact about removing the obstacles," said a Democrat close to Clinton. "The attitude is, 'Our boss wants us to work this out, so lets work it out.'" A former Clinton aide said Clinton appears likely to accept the job if the details of her husband's future can be resolved, and that the discussions of how exactly to restructure Bill Clinton's charitable ventures doesn't appear to pose a substantial obstacle, though another Democrat said she's said Clinton is personally "conflicted."

    One person who apparently has shown no ambivalence: Obama. "It's not like he hedged his bets in conversation with her," said a person involved in the process. While both sides say the situation
    remains fluid, this person said Obama was quite direct: "He offered her the job."
    © 2008 Capitol News Company, LLC

    http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.c...D73C577F694629

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    My gut feeling is that she will not take it if accepted. Commentators have been punditing that if she should, she will lose a powerful position in the Senate, which (conrary to popular belief, I believe) she can use to attack Obama's centralist policies. Secondly, as Secretary of State would weaken her run for 2012.

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Last I had seen of the 40 some appointments Obama has to make 30 some have been filled by old Clinton lackeys. Yeah, that's some real change for ya!

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Quote Originally Posted by wallis View Post
    My gut feeling is that she will not take it if accepted. Commentators have been punditing that if she should, she will lose a powerful position in the Senate, which (conrary to popular belief, I believe) she can use to attack Obama's centralist policies. Secondly, as Secretary of State would weaken her run for 2012.

    Umm... no, that might be your gut feeling, but it's wrong. I say this because in reality, the 'leak' about her getting SecState came from Clinton's side. The Obama camp is furious about the release of that information.

    If she gets that position she will blind side Obama every chance she gets, and put him in a very bad situation.

    Hillary Clinton needs to be removed and pushed out of current politics as far as the current administration goes.

    Obama doesn't need help from the Clintons and he's an idiot if he takes it.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Oh and another thing.... This is the order of Presidential Succession. How could Clinton being Secretary of State WEAKEN her for a run in 2012? It can only strengthen her resume.....



    1 Vice President and President of the Senate
    2 Speaker of the House of Representatives
    3 President pro tempore of the Senate
    4 Secretary of State
    5 Secretary of the Treasury
    6 Secretary of Defense
    7 Attorney General
    8 Secretary of the Interior
    9 Secretary of Agriculture
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    I don't think Hill-baby's ego would allow her to serve Obama in a subordinant position. She would have too much desire to forge her own path and policy rather than pursue her President's agenda. It wouldn't be good for Obama, and it wouldn't be good for her.

    I just don't see it happening.

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Obama announces Clinton, Gates for Cabinet

    By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer Liz Sidoti, Associated Press Writer 12 mins ago

    CHICAGO – President-elect Barack Obama picked a national security team headed by former campaign rival Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bush administration holdover Robert Gates on Monday, and said he wants to consult with military commanders before settling on a firm timetable to withdraw U.S. combat troops from Iraq.

    Obama said a newly completed agreement between Iraq and the Bush administration covering U.S. troop presence signals "a transition period in which our mission is changing" after a long war. The president-elect campaigned on a call to pull out most combat troops within 16 months of taking office, a period he said he still believes "is the right time frame."

    Obama named Clinton, a New York senator, as secretary of state and said Gates would remain as defense secretary, a post he has held for the past two years.

    At a news conference, the president-elect also introduced retired Marine Gen. James Jones as White House national security adviser, former Justice Department official Eric Holder as attorney general, Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano as secretary of homeland security and Susan Rice as ambassador to the United Nations.

    The announcements rounded out the top tier of the team that will advise the incoming chief executive on foreign and national security issues in an era marked by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and terrorism around the globe.
    "I assembled this team because I am a strong believer in strong personalities and strong opinions," he said.

    "I think that's how the best decisions are made. One of the dangers in a White House, based on my reading of history, is that you get wrapped up in group-think and everybody agrees with everything and there's no discussion and there are no dissenting views. So I am going to be welcoming a vigorous debate inside the White House."

    "But understand, I will be setting policy as president. I will be responsible for the vision that this team carries out, and I will expect them to implement that vision once decisions are made."

    Obama's announcements marked a shift in emphasis after a spate of appointments last week for his economic team, led by Timothy Geithner as treasury secretary.

    He now has selected half the members of his Cabinet, and is filling out the top echelons of his administration at an unusually quick pace during his transition as he seeks to fulfill his goal of being able to "hit the ground running" when he takes the oath of office on Jan. 20.

    Obama said his appointees "share my pragmatism about the use of power, and my sense of purpose about America's role as a leader in the world."

    He introduced Clinton first, saying of his former presidential rival, "She possesses an extraordinary intelligence and toughness, and a remarkable work ethic. ... She is an American of tremendous stature who will have my complete confidence, who knows many of the world's leaders, who will command respect in every capital and who will clearly have the ability to advance our interests around the world."

    "I am proud to join you ... and may God bless you and our great country," the former first lady said in a brief turn at the lectern.

    Gates' presence in Chicago made him a visible symbol of the transition in power from the old administration to the new.

    The president-elect, reprising a campaign vow, said he would give the military a new mission as soon as he takes office: "responsibly ending the war in Iraq through a successful transition to Iraqi control." In his announcement remarks, he did not mention his oft-repeated pledge to withdraw most U.S. combat troops within 16 months, although he referred to it in response to a question several moments later.

    Obama said he would make Rice, his pick for the U.N., a member of the Cabinet, an increase in stature from the Bush era.

    Clinton, Holder, Napolitano and Rice all require confirmation by the Senate.
    Jones, as a White House official, does not. Nor does Gates, already confirmed to his post.

    At a news conference, Obama expressed sympathy for the victims of the terror attacks in Mumbai but declined to say whether the Indian government would be justified in pursuing terrorists in next-door Pakistan.

    "This is one of those times when I have to reiterate there is one president at a time," he said. "We're going to be engaged in some very delicate diplomacy in the next days and weeks, and I think it would be very inappropriate of me to comment."

    Obama drew criticism during the campaign when he said the United States would be justified in pursuing al-Qaida terrorists in Pakistan if it had "actionable intelligence."

    In a debate on Feb. 26, then-candidate Clinton said of Obama, "Last summer, he basically threatened to bomb Pakistan, which I don't think was a particularly wise position to take."

    Obama said disagreements sometimes are magnified during campaigns. As for his one-time rival, now Cabinet choice, he said, "I believe that there is no more effective advocate than Hillary Clinton for that well-rounded view of how we advance American interests."

    Clinton will give up her seat as a senator from New York to join the Obama Cabinet. Her appointment was preceded by lengthy negotiations involving her husband, the former president, whose international business connections posed potential conflicts of interests.

    The former president agreed to disclose the donors to the foundation that built his library, as well as contributors to his international foundation.

    Sen. Clinton had scarcely finished speaking when her husband issued a written statement. "She is the right person for the job of helping to restore America's image abroad, end the war in Iraq, advance peace and increase our security, by building a future for our children with more partners and fewer adversaries, one of shared responsibilities and opportunities," he said.

    Gates said he was "mindful that we are engaged in two wars and face other serious challenges at home and around the world."

    "I must do my duty as they do theirs," he said of the men and women in uniform in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. "How could I do otherwise?"
    He said he was "honored to serve President-elect Obama."

    Gates' appointment fulfilled a campaign promise by Obama, the naming of a Republican to his Cabinet.

    Holder vowed to revitalize a Justice Department staggered by scandal during the Bush administration, both over the dismissal of federal prosecutors and the administration's program of wiretapping as part of its war against terrorists.

    Napolitano, like Clinton, must resign her current job. As a border state governor, she has experience with immigration issues, one of the pressing concerns that will confront the new administration.

    Obama said Jones, his national security adviser, "will bring to the job the dual experience of serving in uniform and as a diplomat. He has commanded a platoon in battle, served as supreme allied commander in a time of war and worked on behalf of peace in the Middle East."

    The event was unlike those of last week, when Obama was the only one to speak. This time, he called on each of his appointees to make remarks, beginning with Clinton.

    Vice President-elect Joe Biden said each member of the team shares the goals and the principles of the new administration that "strength and wisdom must go hand in hand," and that America's security "is not a partisan issue."

    Obama has settled on additional members of his Cabinet, although they have not yet been announced.

    Among them are former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle to be his secretary of health and human services and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson to be commerce secretary.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081201/.../obama_cabinet

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    December 1, 2008
    Bill Clinton mentioned for wife's Senate seat

    • Story Highlights
    • Sen. Clinton tapped to be secretary of state in Obama administration
    • New York Gov. Paterson will name Clinton replacement in the Senate
    • Appointed senator will serve two years before special election
    • Caroline Kennedy, Robert Kennedy Jr. among those mentioned
    • Next Article in Politics »





    By Paul Steinhauser
    CNN Deputy Political Director

    (CNN) -- After eight years as senator from New York, Hillary Clinton is trading places, moving from Congress to the incoming administration.



    Former President Bill Clinton has been mentioned as a possible replacement for his wife in the Senate.

    On Monday, President-elect Barack Obama announced that he asked his former rival to be his secretary of state.

    That means the scramble begins to replace Clinton on Capitol Hill. Among those mentioned to take her seat as New York's junior senator is her husband, former President Bill Clinton.

    At a news conference in Chicago, Illinois, on Monday, after Obama announced her selection, Clinton said she wanted to "thank my fellow New Yorkers who have, for eight years, given me the joy of a job I love with the opportunity to work on issues I care deeply, in a state that I cherish."

    Clinton added that "leaving the Senate is very difficult for me."

    The task of choosing a successor falls to David Paterson, New York's Democratic governor. Whomever he picks would serve for two years, before a special election in November 2010 to decide who fills the last two years of Clinton's term.

    Don't Miss


    Paterson has a strong bench to choose from. There are a number of contenders, including at least eight members of New York's delegation in the House of Representatives, New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, Nassau County Executive Thomas Suozzi, Caroline Kennedy, and her cousin, Robert Kennedy Jr.

    "This is not an election. This is not a campaign. It's a constituency of one. David Paterson. It's all about what the governor wants to do," said political analyst Stuart Rothenberg, editor and publisher of The Rothenberg Political Report.

    "Paterson has said he would prefer someone from upstate New York, or a woman or an Hispanic candidate," Rothenberg said.

    As for some of the more unconventional picks, Rothenberg said Paterson could "try to make a splash with a big name like Robert Kennedy Jr." or a "quirky interesting pick" of someone like Caroline Kennedy, who is not a politician.

    But some are suggesting the former president should take his wife's seat.
    In an op-ed column last week in The Washington Post, journalists Karl Meyer and Shareen Blair Brysac urged Paterson to "send Bill Clinton to the Senate."

    If that happened, Clinton would become the third former president to go from the White House to Capitol Hill.

    President John Quincy Adams lost his re-election bid in 1828. Two years later he returned to Washington after winning election as a congressman from his home state of Massachusetts. He served in the House of Representatives until his death in 1848.

    President Andrew Johnson also served as a Senator from Tennessee in 1875, 7 years after the Senate acquitted him of impeachment charges. He died a few months after taking office.

    Bill Clinton would bring gravitas to the job, and he obviously knows his way around Washington.

    But some Democratic strategists who used to work for Bill Clinton don't think the former president would want to go from leader of the free world to being the junior senator from New York. Clinton's office deferred to Paterson's office when asked for a comment.

    In a statement released Monday in which he praised the choice of Hillary Clinton for the nation's top diplomatic post, Paterson said, "In order to appoint the best possible candidate to replace Sen. Clinton, I am consulting with a wide variety of individuals from all across New York State.

    "I expect to announce Sen. Clinton's replacement when the position becomes officially vacant," he said.

    http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/12/...ent/index.html

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Mideast donors put Clinton in delicate position

    By Andrew Jack in London and Daniel Dombey in Washington
    Published: December 19 2008 02:00 | Last updated: December 19 2008 02:00



    Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern donors are among the leading supporters of former President Bill Clinton's philanthropic foundation, according to figures released yesterday that highlight the delicate diplomatic path Hillary Clinton could face as the US's secretary of state.

    The full list of contributors to the William J Clinton Foundation, made public after protracted negotiations with President-elect Barack Obama, shows the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia provided between $10m (€7m, £6.6m) and $25m, with the states of Kuwait, Qatar and Oman each providing more than $1m each.

    Other governments providing substantial support include Taiwan, through its economic and cultural office, as well as Brunei, the Dominican Republic, Norway and Australia.

    Mr Clinton's charitable ties to Middle Eastern countries generated speculation and controversy throughout the US campaign season, but Mrs Clinton's staff have long maintained that her ability to act as an honest broker in the Middle East is unaffected.

    Taiwan has a complicated relationship with the US, which has full diplomatic relations with Beijing, not Taipei, but which is also committed to the protection of Taiwan's security.

    Other donors include Denise Rich, the former wife of the financier Marc Rich, who received a controversial pardon from Mr Clinton in 2001, and AIG, the insurance group rescued by federal funds this year. Fannie Mae, the government-rescued mortgage group, is among the contributors to Mr Clinton's separate fund to help with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

    The fast-growing Clinton Foundation, which was launched in 1997 and which reported total revenues in 2007 of $132m, has funds working on health, development and climate change around the world. But its past reluctance to disclose its list of contributors triggered complex talks ahead of Mrs Clinton's nomination to her new post. The full list, running to hundreds of pages, provides an insight into the powerful connections forged by Mr. Clinton around the world among governments, business leaders and personalities.

    The largest single contributor - listed as giving more than $25m - was Unitaid, the multilateral agency set up by the French government, which funds many of the Foundation's purchases of HIV and malaria medicines. It said it had provided nearly $165m so far.

    The other donor providing more than $25m was the Children's Investment Fund Foundation, the charitable arm of the UK-based hedge fund run by Chris Hohn.

    Contributors giving more than $5m include Haim Saban, the Egyptian-born media investor; Lakshmi Mittal, the Indian steel magnate; and Victor Pinchuk, the Ukrainian oligarch and son-in-law of the former president, Leonid Kuchma.

    Frank Giustra, the Canadian-based businessman with a programme jointly run with the Clinton Foundation, provided more than $10m, as did Sir Tom Hunter, the Scottish entrepreneur.

    Among US supporters giving $10m-$25m each are Stephen Bing, the real estate developer; Fred Eychaner, the Chicago media mogul; and Tom Golisano, the founder of the payroll processor Paychex and US Independence Party candidate.

    The News Corporation Foundation and James Murdoch, News Corp's Europe and Asia chairman and chief executive, both gave more than $500,000, as did Walid Juffali, the Saudi billionaire, along with the Confederation of Indian Industry.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/45aaade0-c...077b07658.html

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    Default Re: Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State?

    Clinton's State Department team takes shape

    By BARRY SCHWEID and MATTHEW LEE – 5 hours ago
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton is quietly building a new State Department team with seasoned diplomats as she prepares for her confirmation hearings next week, according to Democratic sources and officials familiar with the transition.

    Clinton has settled on choices for a number of top positions, including high-profile special envoys who played prominent roles in her husband's administration for key hotspots South Asia and the Middle East, and pointmen for East Asia and Europe, they said. She will also keep at least two career foreign service officers in critical posts, they said.

    The incoming secretary of state plans to name former U.N. ambassador Richard Holbrooke to be special adviser for Pakistan and Afghanistan and is almost certain to appoint former Middle East negotiator Dennis Ross to be her special adviser for the Middle East and Iran, they said.

    Clinton will retain respected career diplomat William Burns in his current position as Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, the department's third-highest ranking job, and keep on Under Secretary of State for Management Patrick Kennedy, who oversees the department's far-flung worldwide operations, the sources said.

    In addition, they said, Clinton will select Kurt Campbell, a former Clinton administration Pentagon official, to be assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, and Philip Gordon, a former director for European affairs at the National Security Council, to be assistant secretary of state for European affairs.

    She also intends to name Princeton University professor Anne-Marie Slaughter to be the State Department's next director of policy planning, they said.

    The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the appointments, some of which require Senate confirmation, have not been formally announced. Clinton herself will appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday for what many expect will be a relatively painless confirmation hearing.

    Her choices for top positions — including earlier selections of James Steinberg and Jacob Lew, both former Clinton administration officials, to be deputy secretaries of state — appear to reflect a desire to bring back or retain current expertise in many of what will become President-elect Barack Obama's most serious foreign policy challenges.

    Holbrooke and Ross have long histories of involvement in some of the most intense diplomatic negotiations in U.S. history.

    Holbrooke brokered the peace deal that ended the 1992-1995 Balkans war. He was also U.S. ambassador to Germany and envoy to the United Nations during President Bill Clinton's administration and gave foreign policy advice to Hillary Clinton during the Democratic primaries last year.

    Ross was the lead U.S. negotiator in Mideast peace efforts for both Presidents George H.W. Bush and Clinton. He played a major part in an interim agreement between Israel and the Palestinians in 1995 and worked on the failed effort to arrange peace between Israel and Syria and the ultimately unsuccessful 2000 Camp David talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

    Burns, who has previously served in President George W. Bush's administration as U.S. ambassador to Russia and assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, was widely anticipated to be kept in his current job, in which he has been a key player in international efforts to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

    Kennedy has been a main actor in some of the department's thorniest internal issues, notably its review of the use of private security contractors like Blackwater Worldwide to protect diplomats in Iraq, the scandal over employees snooping into passport applications and plans to hire more than 1,100 additional foreign service officers.

    After a time as senior Asia policy adviser at the Pentagon, Campbell co-founded and is currently the chief executive officer of the Center for a New American Security, a venture, according to its Web site, "dedicated to advancing a strong, centrist national security strategy." He's also the founder of StratAsia, a strategic advisory company focused on Asia.

    Campbell will replace Christopher Hill as the State Department's top Asia diplomat. Hill, who became a celebrity in China, South Korea and Japan as the chief U.S. negotiator in North Korea nuclear disarmament talks, had been asked to stay on in some position in the incoming administration but will likely move to the private sector.

    Gordon is currently at the Brookings Institution where he focuses on strategies for confronting global terrorism with emphasis on the Middle East and Europe. He will replace Daniel Fried as the top diplomat for Europe at a time when tensions with Russia are running high, particularly over U.S. plans to build a missile defense system in Europe.

    Slaughter, whose new position does not require Senate confirmation, is a well-known scholar and has been dean of Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs since September 2002.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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