[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

The death of Yu Menglong: Political scandal in China (Homo Rape & murder of Actor)

The Pacific Plate Is CRACKING: A Massive Geological Disaster Is Unfolding!

Waste Of The Day: Veterans' Hospital Equipment Is Missing

The Earth Has Been Shaken By 466,742 Earthquakes So Far In 2025

LadyX

Half of the US secret service and every gov't three letter agency wants Trump dead. Tomorrow should be a good show

1963 Chrysler Turbine

3I/ATLAS is Beginning to Reveal What it Truly Is

Deep Intel on the Damning New F-35 Report

CONFIRMED “A 757 did NOT hit the Pentagon on 9/11” says Military witnesses on the scene

NEW: Armed man detained at site of Kirk memorial: Report

$200 Silver Is "VERY ATTAINABLE In Coming Rush" Here's Why - Mike Maloney

Trump’s Project 2025 and Big Tech could put 30% of jobs at risk by 2030

Brigitte Macron is going all the way to a U.S. court to prove she’s actually a woman

China's 'Rocket Artillery 360 Mile Range 990 Pound Warhead

FED's $3.5 Billion Gold Margin Call

France Riots: Battle On Streets Of Paris Intensifies After Macron’s New Move Sparks Renewed Violence

Saudi Arabia Pakistan Defence pact agreement explained | Geopolitical Analysis

Fooling Us Badly With Psyops

The Nobel Prize That Proved Einstein Wrong

Put Castor Oil Here Before Bed – The Results After 7 Days Are Shocking

Sounds Like They're Trying to Get Ghislaine Maxwell out of Prison

Mississippi declared a public health emergency over its infant mortality rate (guess why)

Andy Ngo: ANTIFA is a terrorist organization & Trump will need a lot of help to stop them

America Is Reaching A Boiling Point

The Pandemic Of Fake Psychiatric Diagnoses

This Is How People Actually Use ChatGPT, According To New Research

Texas Man Arrested for Threatening NYC's Mamdani

Man puts down ABC's The View on air

Strong 7.8 quake hits Russia's Kamchatka


War, War, War
See other War, War, War Articles

Title: Back on world stage, a larger-than-life Holbrooke
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/02 ... america/08holbrooke.php?page=1
Published: Feb 8, 2009
Author: Jodi Kantor Published: February 7, 2009
Post Date: 2009-02-08 07:20:03 by Disgusted
Keywords: None
Views: 82
Comments: 2

Stashed in a drawer in his New York apartment between snapshots of family vacations, a photograph shows Richard Holbrooke on a private visit to Afghanistan in 2006. He is mugging atop an abandoned Russian tank, flashing a sardonic V-for-victory sign and his best Nixon-style grin. The pose is a little like Holbrooke himself: looming, theatrical, passionate, indignant.

Three years later, he has inherited responsibility for the terrain he surveyed from that tank. As President Barack Obama's special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Holbrooke will help reformulate and carry out American policy in what many call the most problematic region on earth.

Between them, the two countries contain unstable governments, insurgencies, corruption and a narcotics trade, nuclear material, refugees, resentment of American power, a resurgent Taliban, and in the shadows of the tribal region that joins the two countries, Al Qaeda and presumably Osama bin Laden.

"You have a problem that is larger than life," said Christopher Hill, a longtime colleague expected to be named as the new ambassador to Iraq. "To deal with it you need someone who's larger than life."

Few other diplomats can boast of the accomplishments of Holbrooke, 67, who negotiated the Dayton peace accords to end the war in Bosnia. But as he lands in Pakistan on Monday, back on duty after eight years of a Republican administration, he is still an outsider in the Obama circle, having only recently developed a relationship with the new president. His longtime foreign policy pupil, Hillary Rodham Clinton, has the secretary of state job he has always wanted. And he has taken on a task so difficult that merely averting disaster may be the only triumph.

House and Senate divided over U.S. stimulus billsBiden signals U.S. is open to deal with Russia on missilesBack on world stage, a larger-than-life Holbrooke"We are still in the process of digging our way into the debris," Holbrooke said in an interview. "We've inherited an extraordinarily dysfunctional situation in which the very objectives have to be reviewed." Obama and Clinton chose Holbrooke because of his ability to twist arms as well as hold hands, work closely with the military and improvise inventive solutions to what others write off as insoluble problems. But no one yet knows how his often pyrotechnical style — he whispers, but also pesters, bluffs, threatens, stages fits and publicizes — will work in an administration that prizes low-key competence or in a region that is dangerously unstable.

"Richard C. Holbrooke is the diplomatic equivalent of a hydrogen bomb," said Strobe Talbott, a former deputy secretary of state and a friend.

Return to Washington

Already, Holbrooke's return to Washington has caused tremors. His arrival at the State Department has rattled colleagues who remember him as someone who cultivates the powerful and tramples those with less to offer. Others worry about his assiduous courtship of the media. Judging from interviews with several officials, there seems to be confusion about whether the American Embassies in Pakistan and Afghanistan will be controlled by Holbrooke or the regular State Department overseers.

And even friends acknowledge that Holbrooke is intently focused on his own legend. (Many people have personal trainers; Holbrooke has a personal archivist.)

For now, Holbrooke is both raising expectations and lowering them. He is talking about Afpak — Washington shorthand for his assignment — as his last and toughest mission. But along with the rest of Obama's foreign policy staff, he is also trying to redefine success in the region, shifting away from former President George W. Bush's grand, transformative goals and toward something more achievable.

On Monday, Holbrooke begins a 10-day tour of the region, where he will try to vacuum up as much information as possible, he said, visiting high-level officials and local ones, women who serve in the Afghan National Assembly, military bases, nongovernmental organizations, antinarcotics programs, refugee camps and the perilous tribal region.

There is a reason for this wide-ranging tour: because official Afghan and Pakistani leaders are seen as weak, Holbrooke may have to seek alternative partners, a task to which he is naturally suited, according to Wesley Clark, the retired army general.

"Richard Holbrooke sees power the way an artist sees color," Clark said.

Studying Afghanistan

Until a few years ago, Holbrooke had been to Afghanistan exactly once: in 1971, when he wandered around with a backpack, he said in the interview last week as he frowned at television reports of a kidnapping in Pakistan. The setting of the interview, Perseus LLC, a New York private equity firm where he worked as vice chairman until recently, was an elegant one, at least until he began clipping his fingernails with office shears.

During the Bush years, Perseus was Holbrooke's base, providing him with what friends say was a relatively undemanding job and lavish compensation as he bounced from topic to topic, almost as if seeking a problem tough enough to rivet all of his attention. He founded the American Academy in Berlin, which promotes cultural relations, and used a formerly quiet nonprofit called the Global Business Coalition to match corporate leaders with public health issues. He became chairman of the Asia Society, an institution mostly known for art exhibits, and pushed it toward more policy discussions.

At night, he retreated to his softly lighted, wood-paneled apartment in the Beresford, the grand Central Park West building, or to thehomes in Colorado or the Hamptons that he shares with his wife, Kati Marton, a journalist and human rights advocate.

But with a Republican president, Holbrooke's nose was pressed to the glass of the statecraft window. On the morning of the Sept. 11 attacks, when the greatest foreign policy challenge in generations came crashing into his own city, Holbrooke, the former American ambassador to the United Nations, sat in traffic like any other New Yorker.

Few New Yorkers, though, decide to inspect Afghanistan for themselves. By 2006, alarmed at the deteriorating conditions there and lured by a relative working for the United Nations, Holbrooke traveled privately around the country, returning for another visit in 2008. He went to a police training center in Herat, near the Iranian border, where he watched retired policemen from Alabama try to train Afghans. In Khost, Holbrooke slept on a cot at a reconstruction project office and met with madrasa students and former Taliban fighters, pouring the tea himself to convey respect, according to Kael Weston, a State Department political officer who served as his guide.

At another stop, Holbrooke met with newly elected female leaders who barely seemed to know the basics of legislation. Everywhere, Holbrooke passed enormous new villas built by narcotics smugglers.

At a maximum-security prison north of Kabul, the capital, Holbrooke fell into a long conversation with a senior Taliban operative, a mullah who patiently answered questions and then asked one of his own:

House and Senate divided over U.S. stimulus billsBiden signals U.S. is open to deal with Russia on missilesBack on world stage, a larger-than-life Holbrooke"When will you and the Americans be leaving?"

Holbrooke told him he did not know. "The more you think about it, the more it highlights the dilemma," he said in the interview: the United States cannot say it is leaving, nor can it say it is staying forever.

At home, Holbrooke used the Asia Society to assemble his own personal think tank on Afghanistan. The group, which included General James Jones until he became national security adviser, will soon release a study recommending that the United States declare an end to Bush's "war on terror" and negotiate with Taliban members willing to separate from Al Qaeda. Holbrooke has now left the group, but thanks to him, some of the regional experts who wrote the study are now briefing Clinton.

Cultivating the Powerful

Every December, Clinton can be found in Holbrooke and Marton's apartment, laughing through an annual dinner they throw in her honor. The guests and the entertainment have varied — Glenn Close has sung carols, Robert De Niro and Matt Damon have sat alongside business figures and writers, and one of the tamer toasters called Clinton the nation's "first shiksa," or gentile. But Holbrooke and Marton always give Clinton fulsome toasts of their own.

From the beginning of her Senate career, Holbrooke served as a foreign policy adviser to Clinton, contributing ideas for major speeches and weighing in on crises. Sometimes, Clinton or her staff reached out to him, aides said. But Holbrooke was not exactly shy about calling or sending e-mail messages on his own. The moment the Democratic primaries ended, Obama aides say, Holbrooke showered them with ideas as well.

"I did not cross the DMZ until a cease-fire was declared," he now says jokingly.

By the time Obama sat down for a sustained conversation with Holbrooke, he was president-elect, and Clinton was already the leading candidate for secretary of state. Once she took the job, Holbrooke was considered for the deputy post, but the idea was quickly rejected: he was a negotiator, not an administrator, and the secretary and the president wanted to put a powerful person in charge of dealings with Afghanistan and Pakistan, State Department officials said.

"Richard represents the kind of robust, persistent, determined diplomacy the president intends to pursue," Clinton said in an interview. "I admire deeply his ability to shoulder the most vexing and difficult challenges."

Thanks to Holbrooke's negotiating skills, he won himself an unusual title: representative rather than envoy, meaning that his responsibilities extend beyond the State Department and that he will report to the president, but through Clinton. It is a bit of Washingtonese whose precise meaning will become clear only with time.

His first task is to help lead a total review of American policy in the region, an assignment on which Obama has imposed a 60-day deadline. Another is to learn as much about Pakistan as Holbrooke has about Afghanistan; he is hiring staff members to fill some of the gaps in his knowledge, according to colleagues.

Asked about Holbrooke's sometimes overbearing qualities, Clinton replied with mock innocence. "Gee, I'd never heard that he could be any of those things before," she said. Then she turned serious. "Occasionally he has to be, you know, brought down to earth and reined in."

Marton, in defending her hard-driving husband, said, "Richard is all about outcome." She described him and the new president as "kindred spirits" in their views on diplomacy in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Both Marton and Holbrooke sounded relieved, even a little surprised, that he found a place in the Obama administration. Now, she said, "he won't be able to look back and say he didn't get a shot."


Poster Comment:

http://www.jewishaz.com/jewishnews/980626/holbrook.shtml

U.N. nominee Holbrooke says wife is his 'Jewish story'

Jewish Telegraphic Agency
WASHINGTON - Richard Holbrooke only spent a year as the U.S. ambassador to Germany, but he tried to make sure that his hosts would not forget this son of German Jews.

Visitors to Holbrooke's official residence were greeted by an ambassador who proudly displayed a photo of his grandfather, a Jewish businessman, in his World War I Germany army uniform. "I show it to German visitors as a symbol of what they lost," Holbrooke told The New York Times in a 1994 interview.

Four years, three jobs and a marriage later, Holbrooke is Clinton's nominee to serve as the American ambassador to the United Nations. Raised in the United States after his parents and grandfather fled Germany in the 1930s, Holbrooke is slated to join Clinton's inner circle. Many are speculating that this posting is his tryout for the top diplomatic job, as secretary of state, if Vice President Al Gore wins the 2000 presidential election.

If confirmed by the Senate, Holbrooke, 57, would replace Bill Richardson, whom Clinton tapped to become his secretary of energy. Although Holbrooke remains a relative unknown when it comes to Middle East issues, he will not be setting policy at the United Nations. Much of his direction will come from the State Department.

The United Nations has remained relatively quiet the last couple of years on the peace process front, but the Palestinians are beginning to once again use the world body to try to pressure Israel to make concessions in the peace process. This week, the Palestine Liberation Organization mission in New York was working to force a General Assembly vote to change its status from observer to nearly that of a state. The United States is working to avert such a move.

At other U.N. bodies, the PLO is trying to convene the signatories to the human rights convention to sanction Israel for its treatment of Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza and eastern Jerusalem.

A 36-year veteran of the foreign service, Holbrooke has become best known for his chief role in negotiating the end to the Bosnian war. He would become the most seasoned diplomat to represent the United States at the United Nations since the Persian Gulf War.

After losing the nomination for secretary of state to Madeleine Albright, Holbrooke returned to work on Wall Street, where he had worked in between the Carter and Clinton administrations. He has continued to work as a special envoy for Cyprus, and from time to time on Bosnia.

Holbrooke is currently vice chairman at Credit Suisse First Boston, an affiliate of one of the Swiss banks facing a class-action lawsuit to settle Holocaust-era claims. Holbrooke, who will leave that post to move to the United Nations, early on urged Switzerland to return assets to Holocaust victims.

President Carter made Holbrooke the youngest person ever to hold the rank of assistant secretary of state, naming him to run East Asian and Pacific affairs. Holbrooke returned to that same rank under Clinton as assistant secretary of state for European and Canadian affairs. Clinton cited these experiences as well as his work as one of the chief architects of the 1995 Dayton accords that ended the war in Bosnia when he nominated Holbrooke last week.

Widely praised in the Jewish community for his role in ending the Bosnian war, he received awards for his efforts from the Anti-Defamation League and the World Jewish Congress. According to friends, Holbrooke's Jewishness has not played a role in either his career or private life.

In newspaper interviews, he has pointed to his third wife, Kati Marton, as the interesting "Jewish story." While working on a book about Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat stationed in Budapest who saved Jews during the war, Marton traveled to her native Hungary from where her parents had fled during the 1950s Communist takeover. It was there that an old friend of her mother's told her that Wallenberg had come too late for Marton's grandparents.

It was the first time that she had heard about her Jewish roots. Like Madeleine Albright's parents, Marton's family hid their Jewish identity when they came to the United States. When Albright found out about her own Jewish family history last year, she is said to have turned to Marton for advice and support.

Although Holbrooke has not written extensively on the Middle East, in his latest book, "To End a War," he wrote about the impact the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, which came during the Dayton peace talks, had on the parties to those talks. Rabin "had been murdered because he had been willing to consider a compromise for peace. The reaction of the Balkan presidents was cold-blooded and self-centered; this showed, each said separately, what personal risks they were taking for peace," Holbrooke wrote.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Disgusted (#0)

Richard Holbrooke only spent a year as the U.S. ambassador to Germany, but he tried to make sure that his hosts would not forget this son of German Jews.

Holbrooke is currently vice chairman at Credit Suisse First Boston, an affiliate of one of the Swiss banks facing a class-action lawsuit to settle Holocaust-era claims. Holbrooke, who will leave that post to move to the United Nations, early on urged Switzerland to return assets to Holocaust victims.

In newspaper interviews, he has pointed to his third wife, Kati Marton, as the interesting "Jewish story."

"According to friends, Holbrooke's Jewishness has not played a role in either his career or private life."

Huh?

scrapper2  posted on  2009-02-08   15:08:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Disgusted (#0)

The group, which included General James Jones until he became national security adviser, will soon release a study recommending that the United States declare an end to Bush's "war on terror"...

I fervently wish them the most speedy success with this.

Stop the insanity.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-02-08   16:57:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]