At State, Rice Takes Control of Diplomacy
Secretary Summons 'Practical Idealism'
By Robin Wright and Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, July 31, 2005; Page A01
Three weeks after taking office, Condoleezza Rice hosted Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and their Japanese counterparts at the State Department. When Rumsfeld began to speak, Rice gently cut him off. The message was clear: I'll take the lead, Don. Both Japanese and U.S. officials noted the decisive nudge.
Now six months on the job, Rice has clearly wrested control of U.S. foreign policy. The once heavy-handed Defense Department still weighs in, but Rice wins most battles -- in strong contrast to her predecessor, Colin L. Powell. White House staff is consulted, but Rice designed the distinctive framework for the administration's second-term foreign policy.
By yielding without question (as opposed to after questions, as General Powell did), it seems she is given a freer hand than her predecessor. Though I'm still wondering how she's escaped any responsibility for the mess in Iraq when she was specifically placed in command of stabilizing the place. Goes to show he skills as a diplomat, I guess.