WASHINGTON — Within the halls of the Pentagon, the decision to invite Jared Kushner, the senior adviser to the president who just happens to be his son-in-law, on a military trip to Iraq was heralded as an unconventional — yet brilliant — political move.
After all, Kushner, perhaps more than any other White House adviser is responsible for a seemingly limitless portfolio of matters, both foreign and domestic – Middle East peace, the upcoming visit of Chinese President Xi Jinping to Mar-a-Lago, reforming the entirety of the federal government, and combating opioid addiction to name a few. And while past administrations depended on the National Security Council or a coterie of long-time political operatives, the early days of the Trump administration suggests that to reach Trump, one must travel through the36-year-old man married to the president’s daughter, herself now a senior aide.
Given the Trump White House’s thwarting the conventional chains of command, the Pentagon has decided to go along, in the hopes that the face time — coupled with the experience of traveling to the front lines of the war against ISIS — will become leverage in the discussions about the way ahead.
“You have to understand where the levers are. You don’t have to like it, but that is where they are,†a defense official told BuzzFeed News. “It’s in our interest.â€
Kushner, who has no political, military or diplomatic experience, got a crash course on the war from the highest-ranking military leader, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The trip came with all the trappings of military showmanship — military aircraft shuttled Kushner above the Iraqi capital; he spoke with men and women in uniform serving in often rustic conditions. The White House confirmed on Monday that he'd even met with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.
The Joint Staff was quick to tweet out pictures Monday of the two together on the ground:
The pair were scheduled to depart after only four hours on the ground, ensuring Kushner is back in time to manage Xi Jinping’s visit later this week. A visit that brief is not enough to understand the complex situation in Iraq, but for a fleeting moment for first-time visitors, it can feel like it. Dunford said in a statement released Sunday night that he invited Kushner to see events on the ground, "first-hand and unfiltered."
Dunford stood to gain something as well. For him, it was hours of direct access to arguably the most influential White House adviser — 16 hours sealed inside a plane to be exact.
“That is a looong time to have someone’s ear,†a second defense official explained to BuzzFeed News.
Defense officials said while according to the official story, Dunford invited Kushner, they are not sure if the idea was that simple. Rather it was “DoD initiated,†the first defense official said. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis already had extended a similar invitation to Kushner and Steve Bannon, White House chief strategist.
Top White House advisers in previous administrations have visited Iraq before but were often accompanied by the president when they did. (Neither Trump nor Secretary of State Rex Tillierson have so far visited Baghdad.) Kushner was traveling on behalf of the president, the department said. In addition to Kushner, Dunford also traveled with Thomas Bossert, Trump’s Homeland Security Adviser.
And while Kushner’s role is currently both vast and poorly defined, the White House bypassing the State Department is not unprecedented. Under the Obama administration, for example, bilateral relations with Cuba began with Ben Rhodes, then deputy national security advisor for strategic communications.
Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin says the Department of Veterans Affairs "is on a path toward recovery."
"We have a clear mandate to do better, [and] to make sure that we're honoring our mission to serve our veterans," Shulkin told NPR's Morning Edition.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., are asking the Senate to approve an extension of the Veterans Choice and Accountability Act. The bill, passed in 2014, provided billions of dollars to the VA and was supposed to help veterans get medical care more quickly.
Three years later, VA hospitals are still struggling to add staff, and many veterans still face long wait times to see a doctor, as NPR has reported.
Shulkin discussed his current priorities for the Department of Veterans Affairs, including how the money from the Veterans Choice program has been spent, and his approach to the persistently high rate of suicide among military veterans, with NPR's Rachel Martin. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. (note - do go and read it if you have the time.)
https://t.co/weHOb9azb2 pic.twitter.com/cutkSXK3UU
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) April 4, 2017
Quote by wickedpam:
Totally off topic but is it me or is that Melanie "official portrait" overly photoshopped? I mean the woman looks like they sandblasted off her nose. And that background? Really? It all looks so fake.
Quote by Raine:Quote by wickedpam:
Totally off topic but is it me or is that Melanie "official portrait" overly photoshopped? I mean the woman looks like they sandblasted off her nose. And that background? Really? It all looks so fake.
TOTALLY Photoshopped. It's ridiculous how badly it was.
Come for the deep-dive enterprise story on Devin Nunes. Stay for the comically bad high school photo. https://t.co/ql3vaJI3m3 pic.twitter.com/RuQT2r3s5M
— W.J. Hennigan (@wjhenn) April 3, 2017
Quote by Raine:Come for the deep-dive enterprise story on Devin Nunes. Stay for the comically bad high school photo. https://t.co/ql3vaJI3m3 pic.twitter.com/RuQT2r3s5M
— W.J. Hennigan (@wjhenn) April 3, 2017
Quote by Scoopster:Quote by Raine:Quote by wickedpam:
Totally off topic but is it me or is that Melanie "official portrait" overly photoshopped? I mean the woman looks like they sandblasted off her nose. And that background? Really? It all looks so fake.
TOTALLY Photoshopped. It's ridiculous how badly it was.
That's actually way beyond Photoshop. That was Cosmopolitan magazine level of retouching.
Quote by Raine:Quote by wickedpam:
Totally off topic but is it me or is that Melanie "official portrait" overly photoshopped? I mean the woman looks like they sandblasted off her nose. And that background? Really? It all looks so fake.
TOTALLY Photoshopped. It's ridiculous how badly it was.
Quote by Mondobubba:Quote by Raine:Come for the deep-dive enterprise story on Devin Nunes. Stay for the comically bad high school photo. https://t.co/ql3vaJI3m3 pic.twitter.com/RuQT2r3s5M
— W.J. Hennigan (@wjhenn) April 3, 2017
A geled up mullet. I can't unsee that.
Quote by Mondobubba:Quote by Raine:Come for the deep-dive enterprise story on Devin Nunes. Stay for the comically bad high school photo. https://t.co/ql3vaJI3m3 pic.twitter.com/RuQT2r3s5M
— W.J. Hennigan (@wjhenn) April 3, 2017
A geled up mullet. I can't unsee that.
Quote by Scoopster:
Caption time!https://t.co/weHOb9azb2 pic.twitter.com/cutkSXK3UU
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) April 4, 2017
Quote by TriSec:
Morning folks.
Whelp, it's official - after 33 years, TriSec is leaving the healthcare industry.
I promise you all that I will try not to do this on my first day.
Quote by Scoopster:
Heads up - it's been semi-confirmed that first rogue staff account was stolen & is now being run by Stephen Miller.
They're literally blocking anyone that questions their posts now, myself included. I reported the account as hacked.
Quote by wickedpam:Quote by Scoopster:
Heads up - it's been semi-confirmed that first rogue staff account was stolen & is now being run by Stephen Miller.
They're literally blocking anyone that questions their posts now, myself included. I reported the account as hacked.
How did you figure that out???!!!
Quote by Scoopster:Quote by wickedpam:Quote by Scoopster:
Heads up - it's been semi-confirmed that first rogue staff account was stolen & is now being run by Stephen Miller.
They're literally blocking anyone that questions their posts now, myself included. I reported the account as hacked.
How did you figure that out???!!!
Well I didn't really it was just a preponderance of suspicion. The account taking a more confrontational tone, the fact that they were almost too timely with their tweets that predicted something was about to happen (yet totally got the Flynn resignation wrong how does that happen?), the independent website that subtly hid a shout-out to Richard Spencer and uses scripting that's only been used by people associated with WikiLeaks or the Russians (references to BOTH have since been scrubbed), Add to that the fact that they're literally blocking anyone who questions their validity (they made a point of saying they would block anyone who questioned their identity, not their truthfulness). There were also speech patterns that someone noticed reflecting the writing of someone who was an ESL European - minor phonetic misspellings (District of Colombia, sceptically), suffixes (-esk instead of -esqe), and British colloquialisms (muzzle as a slur for muslims). TBH with that kind of profile it's more likely to be Sebastian Gorka than Stephen Miller.
Quote by Scoopster:Quote by wickedpam:Quote by Scoopster:
Heads up - it's been semi-confirmed that first rogue staff account was stolen & is now being run by Stephen Miller.
They're literally blocking anyone that questions their posts now, myself included. I reported the account as hacked.
How did you figure that out???!!!
Well I didn't really it was just a preponderance of suspicion. The account taking a more confrontational tone, the fact that they were almost too timely with their tweets that predicted something was about to happen (yet totally got the Flynn resignation wrong how does that happen?), the independent website that subtly hid a shout-out to Richard Spencer and uses scripting that's only been used by people associated with WikiLeaks or the Russians (references to BOTH have since been scrubbed), Add to that the fact that they're literally blocking anyone who questions their validity (they made a point of saying they would block anyone who questioned their identity, not their truthfulness). There were also speech patterns that someone noticed reflecting the writing of someone who was an ESL European - minor phonetic misspellings (District of Colombia, sceptically), suffixes (-esk instead of -esqe), and British colloquialisms (muzzle as a slur for muslims). TBH with that kind of profile it's more likely to be Sebastian Gorka than Stephen Miller.
Here's the video—Sec. Tillerson ignores questions about Syria chemical attack massacre, via @NBCNightlyNews pic.twitter.com/sCMQ8FLapo
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) April 4, 2017
Quote by Raine:Here's the video—Sec. Tillerson ignores questions about Syria chemical attack massacre, via @NBCNightlyNews pic.twitter.com/sCMQ8FLapo
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) April 4, 2017
W/ T/ F