ID | 110686 |
Title Proper | We bow to the god bipartisanship |
Language | ENG |
Author | Gelb, Leslie H |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | UPON HIS departure as secretary of defense, none other than Washington's latest living legend Robert Gates cautioned those he was leaving behind to cherish and nurture bipartisanship. "When we have been successful in national security and foreign affairs, it has been because there has been bipartisan support." To drive the point home, he added: "No major international problem can be solved on one president's watch. And so, unless it has bipartisan support, unless it can be extended over a period of time, the risks of failure [are] high." Contrary to Gates's Holy Grail sentiments and to most homilies to bipartisanship, Dean Acheson tagged the practice a "magnificent fraud." As President Truman's secretary of state and thus one of its earliest practitioners, he knew of what he spoke. In a 1971 interview at the Truman Library, Acheson offered a taste of his usual rough-and-tumble candor: |
`In' analytical Note | National Interest vol. 2011, No. 116; Nov-Dec 2011: p.18-24 |
Journal Source | National Interest vol. 2011, No. 116; Nov-Dec 2011: p.18-24 |
Key Words | Robert Gates ; National Security ; God Bipartisanship ; United States |