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Mark Shields
Mark Shields
19 May 2012
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Leon Panetta, Public Servant

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I first met Leon Panetta in 1966. We were both working as legislative assistants in the U.S. Senate — Leon for progressive Republican Sen. Tom Kuchel of California and I for maverick Democratic Sen. Bill Proxmire of Wisconsin.

Washington really was a more civil place in 1966. Republicans and Democrats could and did like each other. I liked Leon — the son of Italian immigrant parents, an alumnus of Santa Clara University and its law school, and an Army veteran — then, and I have liked him ever since. In well over four decades of living and working in the nation's capital, I have never known a better public servant than Leon Panetta.

You don't have to take just my word for it. No one in American political history has polled for the campaigns of more U.S. senators and governors than Democrat Peter D. Hart and the public opinion firm that bears his name. Of his fellow Californian, Hart says, "Leon has always been a missionary, never a mercenary." That might explain why, according to individuals who prefer to remain unnamed but in a position to know, Leon Panetta, happy working with his wife and partner of 46 years, Sylvia, and barely five months short of his 71st birthday, once again answered the call and chose public service over private profit.

That call — to lead the wounded, but vitally important Central Intelligence Agency — came from President-elect Barack Obama, who to his credit has mastered an elusive truth: When the culture of any institution (in this case, the CIA) has to be changed, people who are often most resistant to that change are the very people who are the products of that culture. It does sometimes take an outsider — obviously an outsider with ability, leadership, experience and judgment like Panetta has — to make real change in an organization.

Not surprised by Panetta's willingness to accept the tough challenge of rehabilitating the CIA was his former congressional colleague, retired 10-term House Republican from Minnesota Bill Frenzel.

When Frenzel, like Panetta an authentic hawk on federal deficits, was ranking Republican on the House Budget Committee, Democrat Panetta was the committee chairman. He quoted his fellow Minnesotan Hubert Humphrey to me to explain Panetta's affirmative response to Obama's insistent overture: "When the president asks you to do something, it's not a request. It is a draft call." To Frenzel, confident that his former colleague is up to the CIA challenge, Panetta has always been "a splendid public servant."

In my Washington years, no member of Congress has inspired more loyalty and devotion from his staff members than Dick Gephardt, the Missouri Democrat who served from 1976 to 2004 and was an elected leader of his party in the House for 15 years. Dick Gephardt, not given to the use of superlatives, was uncharacteristically effusive in speaking of Panetta: "There is nobody I have ever known for whom I have more respect. Leon is smart and experienced. He understands government. But, most importantly, he has the highest character and integrity of anyone you will ever meet."

But what about the critics' charge that, except for his time in the Army and during his stint as White House chief of staff, Panetta has not had real experience with the gathering of intelligence? To Gephardt, Panetta "will come to the CIA (leadership) with fresh eyes" and "with the exceptional leadership" needed "to ensure civilian control — with necessary transparency — to protect the nation and still enable Congress to meet its obligations of oversight. ... Leon Panetta is the perfect choice."

I agree. Panetta has always had the rare and valuable ability to laugh at himself. He is the sworn enemy of pomp and pretense. He always takes his public assignments seriously, but never himself. He personifies integrity. It says something good about Barack Obama that he, in his brief exposure, recognized the quality of Leon Panetta. It says something good and reassuring about America that we still do produce Americans like Leon Panetta.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARK SHIELDS


Comments

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Sir;... Your conclusion that America is still producing men like Mr. Panetta, when He was produced in many respects, 50 odd years ago seems a reach... If you look at the training ground for republican Leaders, to take the right as a Bad example, it is the Federalists Society... Ideology, and not practicality, is turning elections and driving our intransigence.... If you could distill the political process into a single being it would be Dr. Strangelove, wheel chair and all... Certainly, our best days are behind us; and the charge that we tried to fight our war on the cheap pales before the reality that we have done everything on the cheap, education, welfare, law enforcement, and healthcare -on the cheap... We are like a pack of mangy dogs fighting over a shoe... And I have been mangy myself, and I have fought over a few shoes; and that is the truth, and being a man in the richest and most powerful nation makes me consider the situation we find ourselves in as outrageous... Now; I saw your appearance on the News Hour; and I heard your comment about government as a instrament of positive change, and I would point out to every person the words of Aristotle written before Christ, that the object of government is good because that is the object of all human activity, my paraphrase, so I ask, where is the good???We were attacked by a pipsqueak of an enemy, and we gave them access to do it, again, on the cheap... Then we went to war, on the cheap, fighting as though determined to lose...But now that the economy is broke beyond stimulation, in its agony, the government is pumping out money, giving capital mouth to mouth, and CPR, and a heart lung by pass... The thing could never support itself -and its government... Yet, the government feeds capital, and not us... It keep the banker in business while the banker continues to put America onto the street...How many years has government nickle and dimed us???Suddenly they have all kinds of money... I think the absolute best proof that the rich were never taxed with equality is the war... If they paid for the war they would not have allowed the war.... But the people, starved, depressed, humiliated at home and abroad will always hope for the adventure of war; and then is when government should seek the truth and tell the truth: that war is always dangerous, always expensive, always a bad idea... We should expect reason, forethought, understanding, and ability from government; but if all who enter there have given up reason for ideology there is no hope of better coming out of government than those going in... Sir; the people have every right to good coming out of their government... Our constitution promised us certain defined goods... There are too many who deny to government the ability to do good, and deny also the right of the people to expect good from their government... There is plenty enough money to feed the rich so long as it is collected from future generations... How can the meagre good we get out of government today equal evils and wants for another day, when we cannot face the evils of this day on our own??? The solution is simple: If the thing does not work; sell it to a German... They will buy anything because they can fix anything... But this is the new world; and we do not have time for old junk....Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Jan 10, 2009 5:01 AM
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