March 2020: How the State Department Could Be Rebuilt After the Trump Administration
Management
How the State Department Could Be Rebuilt After the Trump Administration
The damage at the State Department is worse than you imaginebut also more reparable.
MARCH 12, 2020
By WILLIAM J. BURNS
President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
THE ATLANTIC
Donald Trump is at war with his own government. And on at least one front of the administrations campaignthe demolition of the State Departmentthe damage is even more severe than we imagine. It is also more reparable.
What makes the White Houses efforts so destructive is not just the venality and vindictiveness of the president, or even the stupidity of sidelining or driving away professional diplomats at a moment when the coronavirus is spreading, great-power competition is simmering, and regional conflicts are bubbling.
George Packers recent dispatch from the front lines of Trumps war paints a vivid portrait not only of the targeted strikes against experienced and honorable public servants, but also of the indiscriminate attacks on the institutions they animate and, in turn, the citizens they serve.
If that was all that was arrayed against our institutions, however, their defense and recovery would not be so daunting. The State Department also faces a set of deeply rooted challenges.
At home, the currents of congressional abdication and enablement have been flowing for many years, but now they are acceleratingwith partisan investigations growing in number and intensity in inverse proportion to sensible, proactive legislation and oversight. A skeptical and distracted American public, so conditioned by our discourse to see the government as the source of all ills, is blinded to the risk of the governments hollowing out. Administrations of both parties have intensified the drift in American diplomacy, and the State Departmentsluggish, passive-aggressive, and risk-aversehas often gotten in its own way. Across the government, belittled public servants are less able to protect democratic guardrails, which are only as sturdy as the people who defend them.
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