‘RETURN TO SENDER’: THIRTEEN REASONS WHY CLINTON SHOULD TAKE SENATE’S HINT, DROP HALPERIN NOMINATION
(Washington, D.C.): President Clinton
has been offered a face-saving mechanism
for cutting his losses on the
preposterous nomination of Morton
Halperin to a senior Defense Department
post: The Senate has returned the
nominee’s paperwork to the White House
prior to its departure for the end-of-
year recess. This is a procedure
sometimes used when the upper house of
Congress recesses for longer than thirty
days without having completed action on a
presidential appointment.
In the wake of Friday’s hearing on the
Halperin nomination, the Center for
Security Policy believes Mr.
Clinton would be well advised to seize
this opportunity to spare his presidency
the further damage sure to flow from this
appointment by declining to resubmit it
when Congress reconvenes in January.
Consider the following, illustrative
“baker’s dozen” reasons for
such a tactical retreat:
- Halperin’s performance:
In nine hours of often grueling
cross-examination, the nominee
failed to allay serious concerns
about his past judgment, his
future policy recommendations and
his integrity in accurately
representing both. Clearly, if
the nomination is resubmitted,
much more of the same is in store
for Dr. Halperin. - The votes aren’t there
for confirmation: Only
two Committee Democrats
expressed strong support for the
Halperin nomination, Sens. Ted
Kennedy of Massachusetts and Carl
Levin of Michigan. Meanwhile, all
ten Republicans on the panel
evinced serious reservations
about Halperin in statements,
questions or both. - Sen. Nunn ‘broke the
code’: In a particularly
telling exchange, the Armed
Services Committee’s influential
chairman, Sen. Sam Nunn (D-GA),
conveyed deep skepticism about
Halperin’s representations as the
nominee sought to explain away
his repeated, categorical
denunciations of covert
operations. - Halperin’s misconduct
while awaiting confirmation:
Sen. Nunn also established that
Halperin had conducted himself in
a manner flagrantly inconsistent
with government-wide regulations,
departmental procedures and the
Committee’s direction regarding
pre-confirmation activity. - Halperin caught in at
least one lie: Sen.
Trent Lott (R-MS) demonstrated
that Halperin had lied to the
Committee in declaring in
response to written questions
that he had taken no personnel
actions while awaiting
confirmation when, in fact, he
had on at least one
occasion. - Pattern of tortured
explanations of stances:
As with his explanations of his
position on covert operations,
Halperin was repeatedly reduced
to asserting that the clear
meaning of his statements was
being misunderstood or
misconstrued. After listening to
this absurd contention again and
again, an exasperated Sen. Lott
finally responded by saying the
problem was not that Halperin’s
views were being misperceived,
but rather that they were being
understood too well. - The Agee Connection:
Halperin egregiously
misrepresented his relationship
with Philip Agee, the CIA
turncoat who made a career out of
revealing the identities of U.S.
covert operatives. At one point,
Halperin declared that he had had
no personal or professional
relationship with Agee apart from
once testifying on his behalf at
a British deportation hearing. In
fact, Halperin and Agee had
myriad connections, not the least
being the involvement of Agee’s CounterSpy
Magazine as a member of the
Steering Committee of the
Campaign to Stop Government
Spying, an organization chaired
by Morton Halperin. - Halperin’s Involvement in
the Pentagon Papers Affair:
No less disingenuous was
Halperin’s flat assertion to the
Committee that he had nothing to
do with the disclosure by Daniel
Ellsberg of highly classified
materials concerning the Vietnam
war. At the very least, Halperin
was aware that Ellsberg — who
was living in his house for part
of the period in question — was
leaking information about the
Pentagon Papers, and did nothing
to stop it. - The Documents Problem:
Halperin underwent withering
cross-examination by Sen. Dirk
Kempthorne (R-ID) about documents
that had belatedly been supplied
to the Senate in the days leading
up to Friday’s hearing. In
response to question after
question about improper actions
or questionable policy
recommendations apparently
revealed by these as-yet
unreleased documents, Halperin
was reduced to promising to
provide formal responses and
explanations for the record. - The ‘Musical Chairs’
Problem: As several
senators pointed out, as a result
of legislative action taken by
the Congress in connection with
the FY 1994 defense bills, there
are now three Assistant Secretary
of Defense (ASD) nominations for
two available ASD billets.
Halperin had no convincing answer
to the obvious question: How can
we confirm you when it is not
clear you will have a position to
fill? - The ‘Why in the
Pentagon?’ Problem: A
related question was raised by
several crucial Democratic
senators, notably Sens. John
Glenn of Ohio and Joseph
Lieberman of Connecticut: Why
should there be a senior post for
“Democracy and
Peacekeeping” in the Defense
Department, instead of the State
Department where such matters are
traditionally handled? Both
members seemed to find
unpersuasive Halperin’s rationale
about the imperatives of
bureaucratic politics. - The Holes in Halperin’s
Biography: A
particularly troubling aspect of
the Halperin candidacy received
only oblique treatment as part of
the tough questioning engaged in
by Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)
concerning the Halperin-Agee
connection. It is safe to bet,
however, that Halperin’s
leadership position in such
dubious organizations as the
Campaign to Stop Government
Spying, the Campaign for
Political Rights and the Project
on National Security and Civil
Liberties — and his failure to
mention those responsibilities in
the biography circulated on his
behalf by the Pentagon — will
feature prominently in any future
hearings. - The Kanter Scandal:
Also scarcely addressed in this
hearing, but sure to be a focus
for future Senate deliberations,
was a revelation in Friday’s Washington
Times. The paper reported
that one of Halperin’s principal
advocates — Arnold Kanter — is
working at the Rand Corporation
on an $82,000 contract with Mr.
Halperin’s Pentagon office and
has two other contract proposals
worth $860,000 pending with the
Democracy and Peacekeeping
organization. This
apparent, egregious conflict of
interest should be the subject of
a Defense Department Inspector
General’s investigation before
the Committee is asked to
consider this nomination further.
Worse yet for the nominee, the
Senate’s deferral for at least
two months of any further action
on the Halperin nomination makes
it likely that the pounding Sen.
Kempthorne gave Morton Halperin
is just a foretaste of what is to
come. The Administration appears
to have calculatedly withheld
many of the documents requested
by the Armed Services Committee
over the past few months until
9:07 the night before the hearing
in order to prevent senators from
asking questions about their
contents. With ample time now
provided for a close examination
of these documents, more
difficulties are sure to arise.
The Bottom Line
The Center for Security Policy
believes that the foregoing provide ample
basis for the Clinton Administration to
wish to avoid further Senate
consideration of this nomination. If
Morton Halperin does not have the good
sense — or grace — to spare President
Clinton and Secretary of Defense Les
Aspin the bloodletting sure to follow
from this first hearing, he should be
asked by them (or their advisors) to have
his name withdrawn.
There is, of course, the danger that
the Clinton Administration will make the
same mistake that Halperin has urged upon
the Senate — namely to listen only
to his friends in evaluating his
record, rather than those who are in a
position more dispassionately to evaluate
his judgment and recommendations. Should
the Administration do so, the opposition
to this nomination will only intensify
and the personal costs to President
Clinton will likewise increase
dramatically.
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