Dennis Ross Moves to NSC
The rumors about whether, when and why Dennis Ross, Hillary Clinton’s point-man on Iran, would move from his current post at the State Department to the National Security Council staff have been circulating for weeks, but now it’s official:
The White House announced today the worst kept secret in Washington — that diplomatic troubleshooter Dennis Ross was leaving the State Department to join the National Security Council staff, overseeing a range of hot spots — Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East.
Ross had been Hillary Rodham Clinton’s special adviser on the Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia (i.e., Iran.) He gained fame as the Middle East envoy in the Clinton administration and director of policy planning in the first Bush administration. The new job appears to come with significantly more responsibility.
In an e-mailed statement, spokesman Mike Hammer said National Security Adviser “General [James] Jones is pleased to announce an addition to our already strong National Security Staff. The addition is in the important Central Region that encompasses the Middle East, the Gulf, Afghanistan, Pakistan and South Asia. Gen. Jones is in the midst of a several day trip to this important region.
“Dennis Ross will become Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for the Central Region with overall responsibility for the region. He will work with Don Camp, Senior Director for South Asia, Lt. Gen. Doug Lute, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Adviser and Coordinator for Afghanistan-Pakistan, Dan Shapiro, Senior Director for Near East and North Africa, and Puneet Talwar, Senior Director for the Gulf States, Iran and Iraq.”
That answers some questions, but perhaps not the most important one: why?












Isn’t Rahm Israel Emanuel enough
Actually, I am not a big Rahm fan but as far as I can tell, he’s being much more reasonable on the Mid-East than most.
Obama’s selection and subsequent promotion of Dennis Ross to NSC sends the wrong message to the Muslim world. Or at the very least, a conflicting one.