Rumsfeld’s New Deputies

Some interesting news this morning on possible replacements for departing Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, intel chief Douglas Feith, and retiring JCS Chairman Richard Meyers.

Rumsfeld Is Getting His Players in Position (LAT)

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has chosen replacements for the No. 2 and No. 3 civilian posts in the Pentagon, but said he was awaiting action in the White House and on Capitol Hill to help the Pentagon cope with a growing list of top job vacancies. Rumsfeld said Tuesday he had recommended successors to Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz, who is leaving soon to head the World Bank, and Undersecretary for Policy Douglas J. Feith. Rumsfeld also is said to be actively seeking a replacement for Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Richard B. Myers, who is due to retire Sept. 30. And five of the top six civilian posts in the Air Force, as well as the job of secretary of the Navy, are waiting to be filled.

Among the 47 Pentagon appointments requiring presidential nomination and Senate confirmation, Rumsfeld said, as many as one-fourth have been vacant in recent years because of delays in approval. Even Lawrence DiRita, the Pentagon’s acting press secretary, is due to be replaced after he withdrew his name from consideration by the Senate late last year. The delays occur at all levels, attributable to screening by the FBI and vetting by the White House as well as political turmoil in Congress, Rumsfeld said at a news conference Tuesday.

Rumsfeld would not name his choices for the posts, deferring to President Bush, who must make the nominations. But the range of open positions offers Rumsfeld the chance to continue his transformation of the Pentagon’s top leadership. Rumsfeld has canceled other meetings recently to devote more attention to personnel issues, spending hours each week in high-level conferences discussing nominees, Defense officials said.

Navy Secretary Gordon R. England is likely to replace Wolfowitz as the second-ranking civilian official, senior Defense officials said on condition of anonymity. England, considered Rumsfeld’s “go-to guy,” left the Navy in 2003 for the Homeland Security Department. Rumsfeld brought England back to the Pentagon later that year. While embroiled last year in the prison abuse scandal, Rumsfeld gave England the job of overseeing reviews of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

[…]

Rumsfeld declined to say whom he had recommended to replace Feith in the No. 3 Pentagon spot. Speculation has centered on the departing U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Eric S. Edelman, as the top choice. Edelman announced his resignation from the Foreign Service on March 18, calling it a personal decision. Edelman previously served as national security advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney and as ambassador to Finland. He also served as a diplomat in Prague and Moscow.

The Pentagon’s top uniformed position, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will be vacant once Myers retires. Rumsfeld’s former executive assistant, Adm. Edmund P. Giambastiani Jr., head of Joint Forces Command, is among two leading contenders for the post. The second is Myers’ vice chairman, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, according to senior Defense officials familiar with Rumsfeld’s thinking.

It appears Rumsfeld is staying very close to home with these recommendations, preferring to work with people he knows.

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James Joyner
About James Joyner
James Joyner is Professor and Department Head of Security Studies at Marine Corps University's Command and Staff College. He's a former Army officer and Desert Storm veteran. Views expressed here are his own. Follow James on Twitter @DrJJoyner.

Comments

  1. zeno says:

    That is because Rumsfeld, like everyone else in this administration is narrow minded, paranoid and closed to other views, especially conservative ones.

  2. hal lewis jr says:

    No man in our government has performed as well as Sec Rumsfeld. In 73 years I have seen many people perform well under difficult rules and circumstances,,,but no civilian in our gov’t has done better than Rumsfeld. Please be honest!!This man has been opposed by every person (civ and Mil )who is lazy,incompetent,bureaucratic and half asleep.He inherited a mess from Clinton and than did miracles after Sept 11, 2001. Can’t we honor a team that deserves it??