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Donald Henry Rumsfeld (born
July 9, 1932) is the current
Secretary of Defense of the
United States, since January 20, 2001, under
President George W. Bush. His current term of office is as the 21st Secretary of Defense, and he is the oldest person to have held that position. He served under President
Gerald Ford as the 13th Secretary of Defense from 1975 to 1977, making him also the youngest person to have held the job. Rumsfeld has also had a long career in private industry and public service.
Rumsfeld has been married to his wife Joyce since 1954. They have three children and six grandchildren. He was selected as one of the world's sexiest men in the December 2, 2002 issue of People magazine.
Critics of the war in Iraq accuse him of being a war criminal.
Career
Nixon Administration
Born in
Evanston,
Illinois, of
German descent (his grandfather was originally from
Bremen in Northern
Germany), Donald Rumsfeld graduated from
New Trier High School and attended
Princeton University on scholarship (BA, 1954) and served in the
United States Navy (1954-57) as a Naval aviator. He went to Washington, DC, in 1957, during the
Eisenhower Administration, to serve as Administrative Assistant to a Congressman from Ohio. After a stint with investment banking firm
A. G. Becker from 1960 to 1962, he was elected to the
United States House of Representatives from
Illinois in 1962, at the age of 30, and was re-elected in 1964, 1966, and 1968.
Rumsfeld resigned from Congress in 1969 during his fourth term to serve in the Nixon Administration as Director of the
United States Office of Economic Opportunity, Assistant to the President, and a member of the President's Cabinet (1969-1970); Counselor to the President, Director of the
Economic Stabilization Program; and member of the President's Cabinet (1971-1972).
In 1973, he left Washington, DC, to serve as
U.S. ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in
Brussels,
Belgium (1973-1974).
Ford Administration
Secretary Rumsfeld laughing at the Cabinet table with President [[Gerald Ford in 1975.]]
In August 1974, he was called back to Washington, DC, to serve in the Ford Administration successively as Chairman of the transition to the Presidency of Gerald R. Ford (1974);
White House Chief of Staff member of the President's Cabinet (1974-1975); and the 13th U.S. Secretary of Defense (1975-1977). During this period he oversaw the transition to an all volunteer military and was instrumental in increasing the power of the military within the administration and at the expense of the
CIA and
Henry Kissinger. This was accomplished by promulgating the view that the
Soviet Union was increasing defense spending and pursuing secret weapons programs, and that the proper response was a re-escalation of the arms race. This view was in direct contrast to
CIA and generally accepted reports on the declining state of the Soviet economy, and the earlier success of
Richard Nixon in establishing Detente (referring to a thawing of the
Cold War) with the
Soviet Union.
As part of the Ford administration, Rumsfeld helped formulate the
White House response to the death via
LSD of
CIA scientist
Frank Olson. Olson, a participant in the controversial MKULTRA project, was determined to be a security risk after developing moral qualms about his work on mind control experiments, deciding to leave his
government work and become a dentist. Unwittingly given
LSD and apparently thrown to his death out a hotel window in 1953, the circumstances of Olson's death remained a mystery to his family until they were unearthed by the congressional
Church Committee investigation into the CIA's domestic activities. In response to their threat to sue the
United States government,
White House staffers Rumsfeld and
Dick Cheney reportedly warned
President Gerald Ford that a lawsuit concerning
Frank Olson could result in the public disclosure of additional and related measures taken in the interest of
national security that could extend popular dissatisfaction with the intelligence community and
federal government. An out of court settlement was offered, along with personal meetings between the Olson family and the
White House. The
White House maintained, however, that Olson's death was a
suicide, a detail that remained unchallenged until an exhumation of Olson's body suggested the scientist had been murdered. The exhumation was inspired by the Olson family's discovery of a CIA manual on
interrogation that recommended drugging a subject before throwing them out a window. The full story was reported in late 2004 by
The Baltimore Sun in a story reprinted in papers around the country, including
here in the
San Francisco Chronicle.
In 1976, a military recruit in New Jersey died from a flu that experts speculated might be the "
swine flu". At Rumsfeld's urging, the Ford administration quickly produced and distributed huge amounts of vaccine. Some batches were contaminated. 600 people sickened and 52 died. The program was stopped and nobody got swine flu.
In 1977, Rumsfeld was awarded the nation's highest civilian award, the
Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Private career
From 1977 to 1985 Rumsfeld served as Chief Executive Officer, President, and then Chairman of
G.D. Searle & Company, a worldwide pharmaceutical company whose products included, among others, the oral contraceptive pill Enovid. It was under Rumsfeld that Searle got FDA approval for the controversial artificial sweetener,
aspartame. During his tenure at Searle, Rumsfeld reduced the number of employees in the company by around 60%. The financial turnaround of the company earned him awards as the Outstanding Chief Executive Officer in the Pharmaceutical Industry from the
Wall Street Transcript (1980) and
Financial World (1981). Rumsfeld is believed to have earned around US$12 million from the sale of Searle to
Monsanto.
From 1985 to 1990 he was in private business. During his business career, Rumsfeld continued public service in a variety of posts, including:
New York
Mayor Rudy Giuliani speak at the site of the
World Trade Center disaster in
lower Manhattan, on
November 14, 2001.]]
- Member of the President's General Advisory Committee on Arms Control - Reagan Administration (1982 - 1986);
- President Reagan's Special Envoy on the Law of the Sea Treaty (1982 - 1983);
- Senior Advisor to President Reagan's Panel on Strategic Systems (1983 - 1984);
- Member of the U.S. Joint Advisory Commission on U.S./Japan Relations - Reagan Administration (1983 - 1984);
- President Reagan's Special Envoy to the Middle East (1983 - 1984);
- Member of the National Commission on the Public Service (1987 - 1990);
- Member of the National Economic Commission (1988 - 1989);
- Member of the Board of Visitors of the National Defense University (1988 - 1992);
- Member of the Commission on U.S./Japan Relations (1989 - 1991);
- Member of the Board of Directors for ABB Ltd (1990 - 2001);
- FCC's High Definition Television Advisory Committee (1992 - 1993);
- Chairman, Commission on the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States (1998 - 1999);
- Member of the U.S. Trade Deficit Review Commission (1999 - 2000);
- Member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and
- Chairman of the U.S. Commission to Assess National Security Space Management and Organization (2000).
Rumsfeld, at the time [[Ronald Reagan's special envoy to the
Middle East, meeting with Saddam Hussein during a visit to
Baghdad,
Iraq in 1983. Video frame capture, see the
complete video
Rumsfeld served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
General Instrument Corporation from 1990 to 1993. A leader in broadband transmission, distribution, and access control technologies for cable, satellite and terrestrial broadcasting applications, the company pioneered the development of the first all-digital high definition television (HDTV) technology. After taking the company public and returning it to profitability, Rumsfeld returned to private business in late 1993. Until being sworn in as the 21st Secretary of Defense, Rumsfeld served as Chairman of
Gilead Sciences, Inc. He was also chair of the RAND Corporation.
Reagan Administration
During his period as Reagan's Special Envoy to the Middle East, Rumsfeld was the main conduit for crucial American military intelligence, hardware and strategic advice to Saddam Hussein, then fighting Iran in the
Iran-Iraq war. During this period, US policy supported Iraq, believing it to be a useful buffer against Iran's new religious government, although the United States had originally been hesitant to work with a Soviet client state. When he visited on December 19-20, 1983, he and
Saddam Hussein had a 90 minute discussion which covered
Syria's occupation of
Lebanon, preventing Syrian and Iranian expansion, preventing arms sales to Iran by foreign countries, increasing Iraqi oil production via a possible new oil pipeline across Jordan. Not mentioned was
Iraqi production and use of chemical weapons. The Iranian government had cited several Iraqi air and ground chemical weapons attacks in the preceding two months, and the Iranian news agency had reported the use of chemical weapons as early as 1981. The US State Department first condemned the use of chemical weapons in the war on
March 5, 1984, two days before the ICRC confirmed Iranian allegations.
Rumsfeld's civic activities included service as a member of the National Academy of Public Administration and a member of the boards of trustees of the Gerald R. Ford Foundation, the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships, the
Hoover Institution at
Stanford University, and the National Park Foundation. He was also a member of the U.S./Russia Business Forum and Chairman of the Congressional Leadership's National Security Advisory Group.
Rumsfeld, then-National Security Advisor [[Condoleezza Rice, and then-Secretary of State
Colin Powell listen to President
George W. Bush speak.]]
Rumsfeld was a founder and active member of the
Project for the New American Century, whose goal is to "promote American global leadership" and which in September 2000
proposed to invade Iraq. He signed the 1998
PNAC Letter sent to President William Jefferson Clinton advocating the use of force in Iraq to "protect our vital interests in the gulf".
While Rumsfeld was on the board of directors of ABB, the global technology group, they issued a press release on January 20, 2000 that said they have signed contracts to deliver equipment and services for two nuclear power stations at Kumho, on the east coast of
North Korea. The deal was part of the 1994 U.S.-North Korea nuclear pact. He has not made any public statements explaining the arrangement.
Bush Administration
Appointed defense secretary soon after President
George W. Bush took office in 2001, Rumsfeld immediately announced a series of sweeping reviews intended to plot the transformation of the U.S. military into a lighter, more nimble force. These studies, led by Pentagon analyst
Andrew Marshall, drew widespread resistance from the military services and members of Congress, who worried that Rumsfeld would cancel pet projects. (Eventually, he succeeded in killing the Army's Crusader howitzer and its
Comanche armed scout helicopter.) Media reports in the summer of 2001 ran under headlines like "Will Rumsfeld Be The First Of Bush's Cabinet To Go?"
Donald Rumsfeld with [[Dick Cheney]]
That changed with the military operations launched after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. Rumsfeld led the military planning and execution of the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and the
2003 invasion of Iraq. Rumsfeld pushed hard to send as small a force as possible to Iraq, a concept codified as the
Rumsfeld doctrine.
Rumsfeld's plan resulted in a lightning invasion that took Baghdad in well under a month with very few American casualties. Critics complained that were almost no preparations for the occupation of Iraq that followed. Many government buildings, plus major museums, electrical generation infrastructure, and even oil equipment were looted during the transition from the fall of Saddam Husein regime to the establishment of the
Coalition Provisional Authority. Critics further complained that there was noplan to deal with the existing Iraqi armed forces. They were disbanded, leaving hundreds of thousands of armed and unemployed men in the country. A violent insurrection began shortly after the occupation began.
It has been argued that Rumsfeld should be held responsible for war crimes committed during the invasion by the U.S. military at
Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. A war crimes complaint filed against him in
Germany by the
Center for Constitutional Rights and was not accepted.
scraps Munich visit over war probe Eight men who say they were tortured at Abu Graib filed a federal suit against Rumsfeld in his home state of Illinois.
After the German and
French governments voiced opposition to invading Iraqi, Rumsfeld labeled these countries as part of "
Old Europe", implying that countries which supported the war were part of a newer, modern Europe.
Donald Rumsfeld
He gives more press conferences than his predecessors. The
BBC Radio 4 current affairs program
Broadcasting House had been so taken by Rumsfeld's various remarks that it once held a regular slot called "The Donald Rumsfeld Soundbite of the Week" in which they played his most amusing comment from that week. Rumsfeld himself is said to have found the slot "hilarious." Rumsfeld's penchant for talking with his hands also made him the butt of jokes, including
a series portraying him as a martial arts master.
Bush retained Rumsfeld after his re-election, which raised eyebrows among Democrats and some Republicans. During a 2004 meeting with US troops in Iraq, Rumsfeld responded to a soldier's comments about inferior military equipment by saying "you go to war with the army you have," a comment some characterized as needlessly cold. The response to the question lasted for about an hour and the soldiers present gave Rumsfeld a standing ovation after the speech. There was also criticism about his use of a signature machine to sign the condolence letters to the families of the soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Donald Rumsfeld and [[Eritrean President
Isaias Afewerki shake hands in Eritrea]]
Quotes
- "We take the world like you find it; and Israel is a small state with a small population. It’s a democracy and it exists in a neighborhood that in many -- over a period of time has opined from time to time that they’d prefer it not be there and they’d like it to be put in the sea. And Israel has opined that it would prefer not to get put in the sea, and as a result, over a period of decades, it has arranged itself so it hasn’t been put in the sea."
- "Our task, your task... is to try to connect the dots before something happens. People say, Well, wheres the smoking gun?' Well, we don't want to see a smoking gun from a weapon of mass destruction."
- "Learn to say "I don't know." If used when appropriate, it will be often."
- "If you are not criticized, you may not be doing much."
- "Beware when any idea is promoted primarily because it is "bold, exciting, innovative, and new." There are many ideas that are "bold, exciting, innovative and new," but also foolish."
- "(Cluster bombs are) being used on frontline al Qaeda and Taliban troops to try to kill them is why we're using them, to be perfectly blunt."
- "I'm hopeful that some will surrender. I suspect some won't, and I suspect the result from that will be that the opposition forces will kill them."
- "I think we ought to have a new rule: You can ask two questions, and then we can pick the one we want to answer."
- "Charlie, the answer to the question "Is he alive or dead" -- the answer is yes, he is alive or dead. (Laughter.)"(referring to bin Laden)
- "...And of course, even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while."
- "I mean, let's face it. They weren't exactly baking cookies in those caves." (In response to why U.S. bombers killed people hiding in caves.)
- "I don't do diplomacy."
- "You go to war with the army you have."
- "Well, Dick, calibrate me, but the first thing I'd say is I don't believe you have the war plan -- (laughter) -- a fact which does not make me unhappy. (Laughter.)"
- "Reports that say that something hasn't happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns - the ones we don't know we don't know."
- "Go massive. Sweep it all up. Things related and not." (Sept. 11, 2001)
Affiliation History
Institutional Affiliations
Government Posts/Panels/Commissions
- U.S. Commission to Assess National Security Space Management and Organization: Chairman (2000)
- U.S. Ballistic Missile Threat Commission: Chairman (1998)
- Secretary of Defense (1975-77)
- White House Chief of Staff in Ford administration (1974-75)
- U.S. Ambassador to NATO (1973-74)
- U.S. Congress: Representative from Illinois (1962-69)
- U.S. Navy: Various posts, including aviator (1954-57); reserves (1957-1975)
Corporate Connections/Business Interests
- Gilead Sciences pharmaceutical company: Chairman (until 2001)
- General Instrument Corporation: Chairman and CEO (1990-93)
- G.D. Searle pharmaceutical company: CEO/Chairman/President (1977-1985)
- Bechtel Corporation: Was involved in Iraq-Bechtel negotiations in the 1980s on a pipeline project
- Gulfstream Aerospace: Former director
- Tribune Company: Former director
- Metricom, Inc.: Former director
- Sears, Roebuck and Co.: Former director
- ABB AB: Former director
Education
See also
External links
- * The Saddam in Rumsfeld's Closet, Jeremy Scahill
- *Crude Vision: How Oil Interests Obscured US Government Focus On Chemical Weapons Use by Saddam Hussein, Institute for Policy Studies, March 24, 2003
- *Close-Up: Young Rumsfeld, James Mann, The Atlantic Monthly, November 2003
- *This is war Rumsfeld told Bush, Washington Times, February 23, 2004
- *Conspiracy theory about Rumsfeld
- *Donald Rumsfeld caught lying about weapons of mass destruction
- *ABB to deliver systems, equipment to North Korean nuclear plants ABB News Release, January 20, 2000
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bg:Доналд Ръмсфелд
da:Donald Rumsfeld
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no:Donald Rumsfeld