Henry Kissinger long ago recognized the problem: a talented vote-getter, surrounded by lawyers, who is overly risk-averse
 Even before becoming  Richard Nixon’s national security adviser,  Henry Kissinger
 understood how hard it was to make foreign policy in Washington. There 
“is no such thing as an American foreign policy,” Mr. Kissinger wrote in
 1968. There is only “a series of moves that have produced a certain 
result” that they “may not have been planned to produce.” It is 
“research and intelligence organizations,” he added, that “attempt to 
give a rationality and consistency” which “it simply does not have.”
Two distinctively American pathologies explained the fundamental 
absence of coherent strategic thinking. First, the person at the top was
 selected for other skills. “The typical political leader of the 
contemporary managerial society,” noted Mr. Kissinger, “is a man with a 
strong will, a high capacity to get himself elected, but no very great 
conception of what he is going to do when he gets into office.”
Second,
 the government was full of people trained as lawyers. In making foreign
 policy, Mr. Kissinger once remarked, “you have to know what history is 
relevant.” But lawyers were “the single most important group in 
Government,” he said, and their principal drawback was “a deficiency in 
history.” This was a long-standing prejudice of his. “The clever lawyers
 who run our government,” he thundered in a 1956 letter to a friend, 
have weakened the nation by instilling a “quest for minimum risk which 
is our most outstanding characteristic.”
Let’s see, now. A great campaigner. A bunch of lawyers. And a “quest 
for minimum risk.” What is it about this combination that sounds 
familiar?  
I have spent much of the past seven years trying to work out what  Barack Obama’s
 strategy for the United States truly is. For much of his presidency, as
 a distinguished general once remarked to me about the commander in 
chief’s strategy, “we had to infer it from speeches.” [...]

Not only is donald trump not a lawyer, he is 'not on a quest for minimum risk.'
ReplyDeleteA bunch of lawyers. A bunch of dayanim. Same thing.
ReplyDelete