Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - 6:48 AM
Although President-elect Obama has decided to keep Robert Gates as defense secretary, and while Gates has reportedly chosen to keep as many as 160 of the 250 Schedule "C" political appointees at the Pentagon, uncertainty remains about top-tier posts.
Former Clinton-era Navy Secretary Richard Danzig has long been considered a likely successor to Gates, and conventional wisdom had it that he was a likely deputy defense secretary. But two Democratic sources familiar with the current thinking on the Obama team say the No. 2 person's role will primarily be to manage the department, rather than preparing to take the helm. Sources in Washington defense circles and media reports now say that former Clinton-era Under Secretary of Defense William J. Lynn (right) is likely to be get the deputy slot. My sources tell me that Lynn (pdf), a former Pentagon comptroller and more recently a senior vice president at Raytheon, is considered a "money" guy who can help get a handle on budget, system and personnel matters at the gargantuan bureaucracy during a war-time, recession-era administration.
Also said to be in line for top DoD jobs:
Sewall and Flournoy served as leaders of the national security agency review team for the official Obama-Biden transition, and Carter and Shapiro as members of the Defense Department agency review team. Danzig, Sewall, and Flournoy were on the transition's national security policy review group.
Earlier:
Hearing more names? Are you up for a DAS position? Have the Feds visited you to do a background check on your neighbor? Overhear a transition huddle at your Starbucks? Give a holler: laura.rozen@foreignpolicy.com.
Josh Rogin reports on national security and foreign policy from the Pentagon to Foggy Bottom, the White House to Embassy Row, for The Cable.
Read More
(0)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE