As
John McCain and others attack while bipartisan figures from the past endorse
him, Chuck Hagel calls to mind JFK’s dictum, “You can’t beat brains,” along with David Halberstam’s classic “The Best and the
Brightest,” the story of how brilliant Defense Secretary Robert McNamara led a
coterie of Ivy League high IQs into bungling the Vietnam war, in which Hagel
served as a twice-wound enlisted man.
For
his early opposition to the Iraq invasion, the nominee earns high points, and
it’s hard to doubt the personal qualities of one who has earned the scorn of
fellow Republicans for being right about that disastrous chapter. But does he
qualify to oversee a crucial organization?
With
the departure of Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta, the braininess level of the
Obama administration has gone down. John Kerry is bright enough, but those who
recall what Karl Rove et al did to him in 2004 would not credit him with
political genius. What the President needs in his second term is a cadre of key
advisers who won’t bungle him into extraneous side issues. How do Kerry and
Hagel rate on that score?
As
confirmation grilling continues, the fair-minded should be less interested in
Chuck Hagel’s views on the Iraq Surge, Israel or gays in the military, but the
quality of mind he would bring to the Department of Defense, the subtlety of
understanding to deal with a labyrinth of high-stakes conflict in the armed
forces and those who profit from it.
To
put it bluntly, is Hagel smart enough for the job?
Acumen counts.
Acumen counts.