Posted by
RogerLNicholson on Saturday, November 15, 2008 10:06:28 PM
The Pentagon will give President-elect Barack Obama's
transition team a rundown of "key decision points" it will face in his
first 90 days as commander in chief, a senior official said
Thursday.
Eric
Edelman, the policy chief for Defense Secretary Robert Gates, told a
group of reporters that briefings for Obama's defense transition team
will be intentionally "non-prescriptive," avoiding trying to sell the
Defense Department's current policies and instead laying out a timeline
to prepare the incoming team.
"We've tried to sketch
out a timeline for the department as a whole" and for individual
agencies within the department, "by issue, of the key decision points
that the new administration is going to face in the first 90 days of
its term," Edelman said.
"We've tried to be
non-prescriptive, which is to say, look, here's the timeline, here's
the decision points you will face, here are the choices that you will
face," without recommending policy choices, he
said.
Edelman declined to list the decision points,
saying they had not yet been briefed to the Obama transition team. But
in general, he said, they include such things as NATO defense ministers
meetings and defense budget deadlines. He singled out the budget as one
of the major issues facing the new administration, given the current
global financial crisis and its likely impact not only on Pentagon
funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan but also for war-related
resources at the State Department.
This is the first
wartime presidential transition in 40 years.
Edelman,
who said he is retiring from government in January, said he has been
involved in every presidential transition since 1981. He asserted that
the Gates group is "light years ahead" of where the outgoing Pentagon
team was when President George H.W. Bush handed off to President Bill
Clinton in 1993.
It remains unclear whether Obama
will ask Gates to stay on as Pentagon chief; Edelman offered no hints
but said "a very high percentage" of Pentagon officials canvassed by
Gates in recent months have said they are willing to remain in their
posts after Inauguration Day if the new administration asks
them.
Asked about decisions the Obama administration
will face on striking a balance between resources for Iraq and
Afghanistan, Edelman said he expects that U.S. commanders in Iraq will
take a conservative approach to reducing U.S. force levels there, in
order not to jeopardize recent security gains - even as commanders in
Afghanistan appeal for more troops and other war-fighting resources now
tied up in Iraq.
"There'll be a tension, for sure,"
he said.