National Security Network

NSN's Goldenberg Getting Israel, Palestine, Iran Responsibilities at Pentagon

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News The Washington Independent 19 May 2009

Democracy Arsenal Ilan Goldenerg National Security Network

Right as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu finishes his first Washington encounter with the Obama administration, the administration is adding a progressive voice to its Middle East policy team. Ilan Goldenberg, the policy director of the National Security Network, starts next week as a special adviser to Colin Kahl, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East. He’ll have responsibilities for Israel, Palestine and Iran — precisely the issues that Netanyahu pressed the Obama administration to see his way.

It’s safe to say that Goldenberg, 31, has his own take, though he declined comment for this post. His writings for the past several years on the liberal security-matters blog Democracy Arsenal indicate that he’ll press both the Israelis and the Palestinians to honor their commitments toward reaching a two-state solution, and he’ll seek creative outreaches to Iran. Here, for instance, Goldenberg endorses a U.S. push for an Israeli-Syrian peace accord as “the type of game-changer that improves America’s image in the region, generates positive Israeli political momentum towards [peace], weakens Iran, Hamas and Hezbollah and in the long-term could potentially improve the likelihood of an Israeli-Palestinian agreement.” Here’s Goldenberg pushing back on the idea that American Jews uniformly backed Israel’s Gaza war. Here’s Goldenberg praising the appointment of “serious heavyweight” peacemaker George Mitchell as the administration’s Arab-Israeli special envoy. And here’s Goldenberg advocating early and urgent engagement with Iran, before the forthcoming Iranian presidential elections, since “there is nothing that makes Iranians more suspicious than the idea that the U.S. has a vested interest in the outcome of their elections.”

What’s more, Goldenberg — full disclosure: a friend — made this interesting observation about emerging trends in progressive national security thinking last November:

"[W]hat you now see forming is a broad consensus among liberals, liberal hawks and realists. There is relatively universal agreement among these groups that we need to begin withdrawing from Iraq, focus more on Afghanistan, opt for direct diplomacy with Iran, reengage with the world, improve our image, strengthen our alliances, close Guantanamo and deal with global warming and energy security.

"That is a pretty broad consensus and it’s one that politically was first pushed hardest by the left. On the traditional right-left spectrum, you would have to call this a solidly left of center consensus that has in fact been Obama’s foreign policy platform for the last two years."

Goldenberg might have mentioned that his efforts as part of NSN were a large part of pushing that consensus leftward. Before NSN, there wasn’t a progressive organization that could call together policy wonks and politicians to work out both messaging and substantive, principled policy thinking. It’s no coincidence that two of its other early heavy-hitters, former White House counterterrorism chief Rand Beers and ex-Hill staffer Moira Whelan, are now at the Department of Homeland Security. (Beers is awaiting confirmation as an undersecretary; Whelan is communications director.) Goldenberg isn’t the most senior person on the Obama Middle East team by a long shot. But the difference between where the Democratic Party was in 2004 on national security and where it is today — both substantively and stylistically — testifies, in part, to his ability to have real impact.

Goldenberg is scheduled to start at the Pentagon next week. His last day at NSN is said to be Friday.