Lynn Is In As New DepSecDef

Lynn Is In As New DepSecDef

The full Senate completed installing the first wave of Obama appointments tonight, casting a suprisingly resounding vote of 93–4 to confirm Bill Lynn as deputy defense secretary.

Two Republicans, Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Charles Grassley of Iowa, voiced concern about Lynn before the Senate voted, according to reporting by the Associated Press. But McCain voted for Lynn in the end. Three Republicans voted no, including Grassley, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and John Cornyn of Texas. Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), whose firebrand comments about ethics during Lynn’s confirmation later drew veiled criticism from Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), was alone among Democrats in opposing Lynn.

The full Senate approved Monday night the nominations of Robert F. Hale to be undersecretary of defense for comptroller, Michèle Flournoy to be undersecretary for policy, and Jeh Charles Johnson to be DoD’s general counsel.

Lynn is in, but it seems a reasonable conclusion that the controversy over his background as a Raytheon lobbyist may have weakened his ability to make major acquisition decisions that might affect his former company, whether or not he is legally or ethically obligated to recuse himself. He does go in with pretty strong Senate support though groups such as POGO may help keep his feet to the fire.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

Join the Conversation

Good. He’s not the AT&L, so his “influence” over acquisition decisions should be easily mitigated as long as he recuses himself from the six major Raytheon defense programs. Time to get this train moving.

Lynn has very great credentials, a background in policy, and an understanding of the ins and outs of the industry. However, there are countless others qualified to hold his position; this sets a bad precedent and his nomination erodes some of Obama’s credibility. Although his academic credentials are significantly better, Lynn’s background is quite similar to Dick Cheney’s. Is it realistic to expect that a Washington and defense industry insider is going help improve the system?

Dented armor warriors can be great leaders, if they consider the lessons learned. Proper oversight should solve this problem. Let’s get busy!!

*required

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

NOTE: Comments are limited to 2500 characters and spaces.

By commenting on this topic you agree to the terms and conditions of our User Agreement