By The Prowler on 5.29.09 @ 6:08AM
Hillary Clinton and her State Department are out of the loop --
and incompetent.
Word coming recently that due to a series of diplomatic
oversights, Queen Elizabeth was excluded from a
planned U.S.-French commemoration of D-Day, despite her, as well
as Britain's, role in the war and the D-Day campaign, has put
renewed focus on the inner workings of the Obama State Department
and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
According to State Department sources, while the U.S. State
Department was not part of the full planning for the D-Day
commemoration, American staff involved did not raise the issue of
the Queen's involvement with the French. "It was French
planning," says one State Department employee. "We were advised;
we made sure we would have the necessary people in place,
including the President, that was all."
But some State insiders say that the department in previous
administrations would have taken a greater hand in shaping the
events, particularly those with great symbolic or patriotic
significance for the United States. "That's not a priority with
this crew," says another State Department employee. "But this
isn't the first time these guys haven't connected the dots or
done their research in advance of meetings and the like."
The most high-profile embarrassment for Clinton was when she
provided Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
with a gift to mark their first meeting: a prop "reset" button.
"I would like to present you with a little gift that represents
what President Obama and Vice President Biden and I have been
saying and that is: 'We want to reset our relationship and so we
will do it together,'" Clinton said, presenting Lavrov with the
red button. What the foreign minister got, however, was a button
that said "peregruzka," which in Russian means "overcharge."
In a more embarrassing moment for the Administration, the White
House was seemingly unprepared for the diplomatic and ceremonial
requirements of the visit of British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown. While the State Department was not
the lead on the ceremonial portions of the meeting between Brown
and Obama, the department was consulted and seemingly gave the
White House inaccurate information for what was considered a
standard meeting between two world leaders.
But there have been other gaffes, many of them private, say State
Department employees. Clinton has often showed up for meetings
seemingly unprepared or not fully briefed, misidentified
officials, and at times seemed unsure of Obama Administration
policies. Further, she and her senior staff have been cut out of
personnel decisions, particularly on the selection of
ambassadors, positions one would think the highest ranking
foreign policy official in an administration would have a say in
filling. "All them plum ambassadors slots were handled out of the
White House," says another State Department official. "In part,
this is due to the political nature of the positions and the
payoffs for campaign support, but still, in previous
administrations, it was State that often took the lead in vetting
the nominees."
Early stories on Clinton's State Department highlighted the slow
pace of hiring for her senior staff, but the current issues have
little to do with that, say the State Department employees, who
say there is a growing impression that Clinton is frustrated by
her inability to be front and center on foreign policy, taking
the back seat to Obama, and chafing at White House control over
foreign affairs.