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<text id=93TT2276>
<title>
Dec. 27, 1993: Bring On The Admiral
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DEFENSE, Page 22
Bring On The Admiral
</hdr>
<body>
<p>An abrupt resignation and speedy replacement signal Clinton's
problems with the military--and the President's intention
to set things right
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Michael Duffy and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> Maybe it's Mission: Impossible to be Bill Clinton's Secretary
of Defense. Just how do you bridge the gap between a White House
focused on domestic problems--and headed by a man with no
time in uniform--and a military wary, to put it mildly, of
the new Commander in Chief? And how do you act convincingly
at a time when the U.S. is still defining how it should project
its power in a world where the ideological certitudes of the
cold war have been replaced by raucous warlords and wild-eyed
nationalists? When Clinton made his choice for the job last
December, he could be sure that Les Aspin, who had made a career
in Congress as an expert on defense policy, possessed the necessary
devotion to the task. As it turns out, he should have wondered
more whether Aspin also had the bureaucratic agility and credibility
to work with the armed services.
</p>
<p> By last Tuesday Clinton had his answer. No one spoke the word
fired when he and Aspin appeared at a quickly arranged press
conference to announce that the Secretary would be leaving his
job in January. But Washington gossip had been building for
months that one or more members of the President's foreign-policy
team would have to go. The October battles in Somalia that left
18 American servicemen dead had merely provided a focus for
the growing sense that every time the Administration stepped
abroad it stumbled. Though Aspin may not have been the man most
responsible, he was one of the most visible and vulnerable symbols
of the problem.
</p>
<p> It was a sign of how long the White House had been mulling over
the Aspin departure--and how badly it wanted to head off another
cycle of news stories about the frailty of Clinton's foreign-policy
team--that it took just one day for the President to rush
out his next choice for the job. Retired Navy Admiral Bobby
Ray Inman, a former CIA deputy chief, inherits some of the same
problems that bedeviled Aspin from the day he stepped into the
job, including gays in the military and the question of when
and how American forces should be used in a world of small regional
conflicts. It also remains to be seen how even an adroit bureaucratic
navigator like Inman will manage to court the brass while squeezing
their budgets. But from the start it appeared that he would
have the stature with both the Pentagon and the public that
Aspin never achieved. Even Georgia Senator Sam Nunn, a man accustomed
to shaking his head mournfully over Clinton's judgments on military
matters, was full of praise for Inman. "I think it's a good
selection," said Nunn, adding that he had been consulted in
the choice.
</p>
<p> Aspin's problems had as much to do with his lumpish style as
his policy positions. Rather than narrowing the cultural gap
between the Oval Office and the war rooms, Aspin seemed to symbolize
it. To the creased uniforms at the Pentagon, Aspin's rumpled
suits and looping, ruminative pronouncements made him seem tweedy
and hapless. Oddly for a man who first came to the Defense Department
in the mid-1960s as one of the chart-toting whiz kids ushered
in by Robert McNamara, Aspin was poor at organizational matters.
In a place accustomed to firm decisions and stopwatch timing,
he drove Pentagon planners crazy with meetings run like academic
seminars, marked by late starts, later finishes and stretches
of sedative analysis in between.
</p>
<p> The informality that can make Aspin agreeable as a man also
made him unsuitable as a front man. At congressional hearings
he was apt to put his elbow on the table and cradle his chin
in one hand. He can irritate colleagues by referring to them
by their last name only, or sometimes just the first. Military
brass were startled to hear Aspin refer to General Colin Powell
at a briefing by saying "Colin will take care of that." A senior
Administration official summed up the problem: "Lacks gravitas."
</p>
<p> Even more damaging in the view of the White House were Aspin's
frequent wobbles when he tried to articulate Administration
policies in the media. During the first weeks of the fight over
gays in the military he appeared on Face the Nation to air the
view that Congress and the military brass had the power "to
derail this thing." When he added that "if we can't work it
out, we will disagree, and the thing won't happen," it sounded
like an open invitation for opponents of the change to mobilize.
Political insiders, however, sensed in the ousting of Aspin
what they termed "inoculation" politics: the White House wanted
to ward off Republican criticism of defense cuts. Though White
House officials say there was no single incident that led to
Aspin's departure, the murderous firefight in Mogadishu made
it a foregone conclusion, especially after it was followed by
a disastrous closed-door briefing to Congress at which Aspin
was reportedly at a loss to describe the Administration's intentions
in Somalia. But as far back as September, Aspin was seeing signs
that Clinton's doubts about the foreign-policy team were beginning
to focus upon him. During his regular meetings with the President,
the Secretary had begun to detect a certain "crispness" in Clinton's
manner. "Things just deteriorated," says an aide. "Each time
was worse."
</p>
<p> When he sensed that his job was in danger, Aspin "put up quite
a fight," says a White House aide. He bought some new suits
creased in the right places and a few camera-friendly ties.
By mid-November Clinton had quietly asked White House chief
of staff Mack McClarty to come up with a list of potential replacements.
Working with Vice President Al Gore, he assembled the names.
</p>
<p> Inman, who was at the top of Gore's list, had the advantage
of having already been vetted by the White House last year as
a potential CIA chief. At Gore's suggestion, the President invited
Inman to the White House for a two-hour afterdinner chat about
national-security issues. Though it wasn't intended as a job
interview, it was enough to impress Clinton that he may have
found his candidate. Not only was Inman a policy expert and
a businessman with managerial experience, like Clinton he was
a small-town boy from the South (East Texas) who had risen to
the top.
</p>
<p> It may have been harder to sell Clinton to Inman, a Bush voter
who didn't much feel like returning to Washington. "The President
had to talk him into it," says a senior White House official.
"It wasn't about defense or budgets. They just needed to get
to know each other." The admiral was taken aback when the White
House contacted him about the job two weeks ago. He agreed to
take it only after he was satisfied that Clinton was personally
committed to building a strong, forward-looking national-security
policy with bipartisan support. Though impressed by Clinton,
Inman still hesitated until his old friend "Chris," as Inman
calls Secretary of State Warren Christopher, stepped in with
an appeal. When the deal was finally cut, the President was
particularly pleased that word of Aspin's departure had not
leaked. On Wednesday he remarked gleefully to an aide, "It is
absolutely astonishing that this thing has held."
</p>
<p> Inman did not ask Clinton for a specific dollar commitment on
the defense budget. Long convinced that the Pentagon procurement
process is bloated and slow, Inman strongly believes more prudent
spending could achieve savings, and is likely to make procurement
reform a major goal. Aspin never really got control over the
budget process. Early this year he sent memos to service chiefs
telling them to propose $11 billion in reductions in addition
to cuts the Bush Administration had already made in the Defense
Department for fiscal 1994. But when he introduced his first
Pentagon budget in March, it failed to terminate a single major
program. As Aspin told after his resignation, "It's obviously
better to be Secretary of Defense when budgets are going up
than when they're headed down."
</p>
<p> Though Inman will be the first career military officer to become
Defense Secretary since George Marshall left the job in 1951,
the admiral might not be any more forthcoming with the military
than Aspin was. That's because, matters of style aside, the
outgoing Secretary took few positions that led to friction with
Pentagon brass. Though he came to the job willing to entertain
the idea that the U.S should be prepared to use force selectively
to solve regional problems like Bosnia and Haiti, he quickly
became a defender of General Powell's all-or-nothing view that
in places where the U.S. is not prepared to commit the full
extent of its power, it should not commit any.
</p>
<p> The Pentagon had become accustomed to light supervision by civilians
under Reagan and Bush, when Defense Department officials routinely
had their staff work done by uniformed personnel of the Joint
Chiefs. Inman may be less likely than Aspin to fill Pentagon
offices with former congressional aides. But if Inman's wise,
he will fill posts more quickly. Aspin launched one of the major
undertakings of his tenure, a "bottom up" review of military-force
needs in the post-cold war era, even as dozens of high-level
vacancies remained, including the secretaries of the Army, Navy
and Air Force.
</p>
<p> In fact, his most serious problem in the Secretary's job was
not related to his policy decisions but to the overall drift
of the Administration he was part of. "Les Aspin was dealt a
difficult hand," says Oklahoma Representative Dave McCurdy,
a member of the House Armed Services Committee, which Aspin
once chaired. "The first card was gays and lesbians: faceup.
Then came the three regional problems--Somalia, Bosnia and
Haiti--for which nobody in the Administration had real answers."
The heaving and rocking of the Clinton White House as it struggles
to define America's role in the world may prove to be Bobby
Ray Inman's biggest vexation too. If the Secretary of Defense
is supposed to symbolize the President's policy, maybe Les Aspin,
with all his vagueness and indecision, did that job all too
well.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>