US political appointees draw fire over plum postings

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WASHINGTON: US foreign policy circles are complaining about the record number of political appointees, especially big donors to President Barack Obama, getting plum postings at embassies around the world.

While the practice of thanking big presidential campaign donors with chief of mission postings is common in the United States, it is rarely used by other world powers.

And Obama’s Democratic administration has stood out in this regard, after a series of gaffes by ambassador picks during Senate hearings were met with sarcasm by Republican critics and the press who said they were unqualified.

According to the American Foreign Service Association, which counts 16,400 current and retired diplomats among its members, the number of political appointees serving ambassadorships has broken all records at 37 percent.

In recent decades, the rate has been an average of 30 percent of posts going to people close to the president and 70 percent to career diplomats.

Worse, according to the professional organisation that scrutinizes every diplomatic nomination, the rate reached 53 percent during Obama’s second term that began in January 2013.

That’s far and above the rates of between 27 and 38 percent under the administrations of George W Bush, Bill Clinton, George H W Bush, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford.

“It is a real concern for career diplomats,” AFSA president Robert Silverman told AFP.

“We want a debate about qualifications, and not about political influence or donations.”

The organisation refuses to discuss specific cases but lists all the White House’s “political” appointees to head foreign missions, chief among them critical allies such as Britain, Canada, China, the European Union, Germany, Japan, Saudi Arabia and the United Nations.

The rumblings began when million-dollar donations bundler and Chartwell Hotels chief executive George Tsunis, who raised about $1.3 million for Obama and the Democratic Party, testified at his hearing to be confirmed as ambassador to Norway.

In addition to admitting he never visited the Nordic country, Tsunis said the constitutional monarchy has a president and described the anti-immigration Progress Party, which is part of the ruling coalition, as being part of “fringe elements” that “spew their hatred” and have been denounced by the government.

Noah Mamet, who raised more than half a million dollars for Obama, admitted he knew nothing about Argentina or even the Spanish language, despite being nominated to serve in Buenos Aires. With the White House expressing continued confidence in the nominees, The Los Angeles Times asked: “The question is, how much confidence should the American people have in Obama’s judgment in ambassadors?”

The State Department, however, stands its ground. It insists that political campaign donations have nothing to do with diplomatic nominations.

“Either giving or not giving money doesn’t affect either way. It doesn’t make you more or less qualified,” deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters this week. “We believe all of our nominees are incredibly qualified.” — AFP