"This is my last election. After my election, I have more flexibility."
-- Barack Obama to Dmitry Medvedev, March 26, 2012
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The puzzle of the Chuck Hagel nomination for defense secretary is that you normally choose someone of the other party for your Cabinet to indicate a move to the center, but, as the Washington Post's editorial board points out, Hagel's foreign-policy views are to the left of President Obama's, let alone the GOP's. Indeed, they are at the fringe of the entire Senate.
So what's going on? Message-sending. Obama won re-election. He no longer has to trim, to appear more moderate than his true instincts. He has the "flexibility" to be authentically Obama.
Hence the Hagel choice: Under the guise of centrist bipartisanship, it allows the president to leave the constrained first-term Obama behind and follow his natural Hagel-like foreign-policy inclinations. On three pressing issues in particular:
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MILITARY SPENDING
Current Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in August 2011 that the scheduled automatic $600 billion defense cuts ("sequestration") would result in "hollowing out the force," which would be "devastating." And strongly hinted that he might resign rather than enact them.