Newt Gingrich, addressing the Republican Jewish Coalition candidates'
forum Wednesday, threw out several red meat appeals targeted to his
conservative, pro-Israel audience. Gingrich supplied his proposals in
characteristically sweeping remarks that sometimes seemed to veer all
over the place.
Gingrich also vowed that within two hours of his inauguration, he'd
order that the U.S. embassy in Israel be moved from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem. That proposal won rousing applause from the RJC crowd.
If he would accept it, "I will ask John Bolton to be Secretary of
State," Gingrich said, to more thunderous applause. Bolton, a Republican
arms-control hawk, frequently advocates that the United States or
Israel launch a preemptive military strike on Iran. When George W. Bush
nominated Bolton as envoy to the United Nations, the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee didn't permit his nomination to advance
to the full Senate, in part because of his reputation for running
roughshod over officials and staff who didn't share his views.
Gingrich said he would mandate Secretary of State Bolton to institute
a battle against an attitude of "appeasement" at the State Department
and to promote a more "aggressive" approach to U.S. statecraft. Gingrich
also said that he would shake up the intelligence community to carry
out covert operations--without reference to the Obama White House's own
fairly extensive covert operations, such as the mission that killed
Osama bin Laden in Pakistan last May.
As for Bolton's interest in the job? He's still keeping his options open.
"Mr. Bolton has not endorsed any candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination," Bolton's assistant told Yahoo News' Zachary
Roth by email Thursday. "He has spoken to a number of those running, and
he would be happy to discuss national security issues with anyone in
the race."
Gingrich's critique of a State Department and intelligence community
prone to "appeasement" resonated with the positions that some
influential neoconservatives took during Bush's first term. At the same
time, Gingrich's remarks didn't account for the close coordination of
American military and intelligence operations that have taken numerous
terror suspects off the battlefield in recent years, as commanders have
discreetly put it.
Following Gingrich's remarks, Texas Governor Rick Perry and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann addressed the forum, which earlier warmly received presumed frontrunner Mitt Romney.
Both Romney and Gingrich "have a natural constituency" in the RJC ranks, board member and GOP strategist Ari Fleischer said
earlier Wednesday. "Romney already has a lot of supporters here,
because—like the rest of the country--most people previously thought
Newt was out."
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