palin coached by aipac

Neoconservatives plan Project Sarah Palin
to shape future American foreign policy

Tim Shipman, Daily Telegraph, 16 Sep 2008

Comments by the governor of Alaska in her first television interview, in which she said NATO may have to go to war with Russia and took a tough line on Iran’s nuclear programme, were the result of two weeks of briefings by neoconservatives. Sources in the McCain camp, the Republican Party and Washington think tanks say Palin was identified as a potential future leader of the neoconservative cause in June 2007. That was when the annual summer cruise organised by the right-of-centre Weekly Standard magazine docked in Juneau, the Alaskan state capital, and the pundits on board took tea with Palin. Her case as McCain’s running mate was later advanced vociferously by William Kristol, the magazine’s editor, who is widely seen as one of the founding fathers of American neoconservative thought — including the robust approach to foreign policy which spurred American intervention in Iraq. In 1988, Kristol became a leading adviser of another inexperienced Republican vice presidential pick, Dan Quayle, tutoring him in foreign affairs. Last week he praised Palin as “a spectre of a young, attractive, unapologetic conservatism” that “is haunting the liberal elites”.

Now many believe that the “neocons”, whose standard bearer in government, Cheney, lost out in Washington power struggles to the more moderate defence secretary Gates and secretary of state Rice last year, are seeking to mould Palin to renew their influence. A former Republican White House official, who now works at the AEI, a bastion of Washington neoconservatism, admitted: “She’s bright and she’s a blank page. She’s going places and it’s worth going there with her.” Asked if he sees her as a “project”, the former official said: “Your word, not mine, but I wouldn’t disagree with the sentiment.” Pat Buchanan, the former Republican presidential candidate and a foreign policy isolationist, who opposes the war in Iraq, the project most closely associated with the neocons, said: “Palin has become, overnight, the most priceless political asset the movement has. Look for the neocons to move with all deliberate speed to take her into their camp by pressing upon her advisers and staff, and steering her into the AEI-Weekly Standard-War Party orbit.”

In the two weeks since she was named as McCain’s running mate that is just what has happened. While McCain was publicly distancing himself from the policies and personalities of the Bush administration, Palin was sequestered with a series of former aides to George W. Bush. McCain’s chief foreign policy adviser, Randy Scheunemann, an influential neoconservative, wasted no time in briefing Palin. He quickly made Steve Biegun, a former number three on the National Security Council, her chief foreign policy adviser. Steven Clemons, of the New American Foundation think tank in Washington, a chronicler of the ebb and flow of neocon power in the White House, bemoaned the appointment, saying Biegun “will turn her into an advocate of Cheneyism and Cheney’s view of national-security issues.” Eyebrows were also raised when, on the Tuesday after her selection, Palin was ushered into the company of AIPAC, the pro-Israeli lobby group in Washington.

In her first television interview, she was on message, agreeing with McCain that Israel has the right to take military action against Iran if necessary. “I don’t think that we should second-guess the measures that Israel has to take to defend themselves and for their security,” she said. Jacob Heilbrunn, author of They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons, said the interview was “further evidence that she has soaked up the neocon view of the world.” He was particularly alarmed by her suggestion that war with Russia is “perhaps” a possibility. “The neocons surrounded Dan Quayle, with William Kristol becoming his main tutor. Now both McCain and Palin are being closely advised by neocons. Far from being chastened by the Iraq debacle, the neocons are now poised for their moment of greatest influence.” Buchanan has predicted Palin will become a major player for years to come. “In choosing Palin, McCain may also have changed the course of history,” he said. “Should this ticket win, Palin will eclipse every other Republican as heir apparent to the presidency and will have her own power base, wholly independent of President McCain.”

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