Biden's Picks for Pentagon Transition Team Show He Is Cold War-Era Fossil
- Voice of Revolution -
Having declared
himself President-elect, Joe Biden on November 10
announced a 23-member transition team to review
the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) between now
and when the new president is supposed to take
office on January 20, 2021. The people chosen and
the institutions they come from -- created
during the Cold War -- are indicative
that a Biden administration will be as hopelessly
stuck in past failures as have its predecessors.
U.S. pragmatism follows the adage that failures
will somehow turn into successes if only one
reshuffles the cards enough times. Fossilized Cold
War relics will not provide the U.S. with a way
forward no matter how much it tries.
Defense News notes two notable members of
the team: "The team is led by Kathleen Hicks, who
served as both principal deputy undersecretary of
defense for policy, as well as deputy
undersecretary of defense for strategy, plans, and
forces in the Obama administration. She is
currently the director of the Center for Strategic
and International Studies' [CSIS] International
Security Program.
"Also included on the list is Christine Wormuth,
director of the RAND International Security and
Defense Policy Center. Wormuth held a number of
roles in the Obama administration, culminating as
undersecretary of defense for policy from
2014-2016. Both Hicks and Wormuth were seen as
contenders for top DoD jobs, perhaps deputy
secretary of defense, before today's
announcement."
Center for Strategic and International Studies
The CSIS is a U.S. thinktank that says its
"purpose is to define the future of national
security. We are guided by a distinct set of
values -- non-partisanship, independent thought,
innovative thinking, cross-disciplinary
scholarship, integrity and professionalism, and
talent development. CSIS's values work in concert
toward the goal of making real-world impact."
"A Brief History" of the CSIS on its website
states it was founded in 1962 "at the height of
the Cold War" and that since then it "has been at
the forefront of solutions to the vexing foreign
policy and national security problems of the day.
[...] In 2007, the CSIS Smart Power Commission
provided a diagnosis of America's declining
standing in the world and offered a set of
recommendations for a smart power approach to
America's global engagement.[...] CSIS is
regularly called upon by Congress, the executive
branch, the media, and others to explain the day's
events and offer recommendations to improve U.S.
strategy."
Topics that the CSIS deals with include: climate
change; cypersecurity and technology; defense and
security; economics; energy and sustainability;
global health; human rights; international
development.
RAND International Security and Defense Policy
Center
The RAND International Security and Defense
Policy Center (ISDP) says its "work spans the
political, military, and economic aspects of
global challenges, drawing on the best available
qualitative data, quantitative data, and
methodological tools. ISDP helps its clients
understand and manage security challenges,
evaluate the effectiveness of military forces and
postures, and build the capacity of allies and
partners."
The ISDP website further states that it "focuses
on the most-pressing challenges facing the United
States and the world, including potential threats
and opportunities relating to China, Russia, Iran,
North Korea, terrorism, civil war, space, and
technological change. ISDP has helped clients
develop strategies and operational concepts
through workshops, gaming, and other cutting-edge
methods. Topics include countering advanced
Chinese missiles, deterring Russian and North
Korean aggression, and targeting terrorist
networks through coordinated applications of hard
and soft power."
The ISDP is also involved in evaluating "how U.S.
competitors are modernizing their military forces
to constrain U.S. and allied military power
projection." It also supports "U.S. efforts to
strengthen both the governments and the militaries
of allies and partners. By applying proven
analytical methods, ISDP helps identify
opportunities for U.S. programs to improve the
ability of allies and partners to operate
alongside, or in place of, U.S. military forces."
The ISDP is part of the RAND Corporation, that
began as the U.S. Air Force's "Project RAND"
(Research ANd Development) after World War II that
conducted long-range planning of weapons
development. In March 1946, the Douglas Aircraft
Company was granted a contract to conduct research
on intercontinental warfare as Project RAND.
Project RAND separated from Douglas on May 14,
1948, becoming the RAND Corporation. Between
2013-2019, RAND was the top recipient of U.S.
government and defence contractor funding,
receiving $1,209,100,000 in six years.
Center for a New American Security
Biden's Pentagon transition team also draws two
members from the Center for a New American
Security (CNAS). It describes itself as "an
independent, bipartisan, nonprofit organization
that develops strong, pragmatic, and principled
national security and defense policies. CNAS
engages policymakers, experts, and the public with
innovative, fact-based research, ideas, and
analysis to shape and elevate the national
security debate. A key part of our mission is to
inform and prepare the national security leaders
of today and tomorrow." Its website indicates a
preoccupation with U.S. contention with Russia and
China. A section titled "A New American Way of
War," says, "The 2018 National Defense Strategy
[NDS] rightly focuses on competing with, deterring
and, if necessary, defeating Chinese and Russian
aggression. This stark break from a post-Cold War
era focused on regional and irregular threats
requires a wholesale rethinking of how the U.S.
military fights wars.
"A New American Way of War begins where the
nascent ideas of the NDS leave off to develop new
warfighting approaches, operational concepts, and
associated force structure requirements."
Biden's Pentagon Transition Team
The full list of Biden's Pentagon transition team
is:
- Susanna Blume of CNAS, who served as deputy
chief of staff for programs and plans under Bob
Work
- Sharon Burke of the New America think tank, a
former assistant secretary of defense for
operational energy
- Lisa Coe of OtherSide Consulting, a defence
industry consultant
- Melissa Dalton of the CSIS, who has held a
number of jobs in the Pentagon
- John Estrada, a Marine Corps veteran who was
appointed as ambassador to the Republic of
Trinidad and Tobago towards the end of the Obama
administration
- Victor Garcia of Rebellion Defense, a former
director of engineering for the U.S. Digital
Service
- Karen Gibson, a retired Army lieutenant general
who retired in March as deputy director of
National Intelligence for National Security
Partnerships
- Michelle Howard, a retired four-star admiral
who became the first woman to serve as vice chief
of staff for any military branch
- Andrew Hunter of the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, a well-known acquisition
expert
- Mike McCord of the Stennis Center for Public
Service, a former DoD comptroller during the Obama
administration
- Farooq Mitha, who served as special assistant
to the director of the Department of Defense
Office of Small Business Programs under Obama and
as a senior advisor on Muslim American engagement
for the Biden campaign
- Frank Mora for Florida International
University, a former deputy assistant secretary of
defence for the Western Hemisphere under Obama
- Michael Negron, a Navy vet with ties to former
Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel who is currently
assistant director at the Department of Commerce
and Economic Opportunity to the state of Illinois
- Stacie Pettyjohn of the RAND Corporation, an
expert in wargaming who works on strategy and
doctrine issues
- Ely Ratner of the Center for a New American
Security, Biden's deputy national security adviser
during the Obama administration
- Deborah Rosenblum of the Nuclear Threat
Initiative, a nuclear expert who has been part of
negotiations with North Korea
- Lisa Sawyer of JPMorgan Chase, who worked a
number of jobs at both the Pentagon and National
Security Council
- Shawn Skelly of CACI International, a Navy vet,
former commissioner on the National Commission on
Military, National, and Public Service and
vice-president of the Out in National Security
group
- Terri Tanielian of the RAND Corporation, who
focuses on military and veteran health issues
- Veronica Valdez, a former special assistant to
both Navy and Air Force leadership, currently with
the Port of Seattle
- Debra Wada, a former assistant secretary of the
Army (Manpower & Reserve Affairs) and longtime
House Armed Services Committee staffer.
Voice of Revolution is a publication of the
U.S. Marxist-Leninist Organization.
This article was published in
Volume 50 Number 45 - November 21, 2020
Article Link:
Biden's Picks for Pentagon Transition Team Show He Is Cold War-Era Fossil - Voice of Revolution
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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