The inexorable rise of Jake Sullivan
In his first interview as Joe Biden's national
security adviser, Sullivan lays out his plans for a world transformed by the
coronavirus — and Donald Trump.
By NATASHA
BERTRAND
11/27/2020
02:00 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/27/jake-sullivan-biden-national-security-440814
“You have
to be kidding me.”
Philippe
Reines was sitting in a yurt in Mongolia during a trip with then-Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, sure that he’d finally done it: traveled to more
countries than anyone else with Clinton as one of her top aides. And then Jake
Sullivan strolled in.
“He’d
literally just been in Oman for secret peace talks with the Iranians, and he
managed to make it to this remote part of Mongolia,” said Reines, still floored
by the feat seven years later. “So in the end he’s the only human being who
went to 112 countries with Hillary. His capacity for work is just that
annoying,” he joked in an interview, one of a dozen for this story.
All that
work has clearly paid off: Sullivan, now 43, will be the youngest national
security adviser in nearly 60 years when President-elect Joe Biden is
inaugurated in January — in what those who know him described as an
almost-inevitable next step for a man who’s always seemed preternaturally older
than his actual age.
After
holding top positions at the State Department and in the Obama White House and
playing a key role in negotiating the Iran nuclear deal, it’s clear Sullivan is
“on the Benjamin Button track,” Reines said, referring to the F. Scott
Fitzgerald character who is born into an old man’s body and ages backward. “He is
the equivalent of at least a decade, if not two, beyond his biological years.”
Reached by
phone on Tuesday, just hours after he was officially introduced by Biden along
with other incoming national security leaders, Sullivan spoke at length for the
first time about the unique circumstances that will face him and his team on
Day One — specifically, a raging pandemic and a changing climate that will
spawn new dangers.
It remains
to be seen how much progress a Biden administration will be able to make on issues
like climate change and a return to the Iran deal with what is likely a
GOP-controlled Senate — Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has not allowed
any climate plans through the upper chamber and supported Trump’s withdrawal
from the Iran deal in 2018, calling it “a deeply flawed agreement.”
In an
interview, though, Sullivan said he believes “the American people will
understand now, better than they have in a long time, that a threat that
emanates from elsewhere can cause massive disruption and catastrophic loss of
life. And so being engaged in the world — being out there with our diplomats
and our public health professionals and being part of institutions and systems
that can help track and prevent threats before they arrive at our shores — that
matters profoundly to working families across this country.”
Sullivan
grew up with four siblings in a middle-class home in Minneapolis. His father
worked on the business side of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune and later at the
University of Minnesota’s journalism school, and his mother worked as a public
school teacher. They were strict and determined that their kids prioritize
education, said Sarah Rathke, who first met Sullivan at cross country practice
at Southwest High School. All five Sullivan kids attended either Yale, as Jake
did for undergrad and law school, or Cornell.
“Looking
back at everything he did during those years, it’s clear he’s always had a
plan,” Rathke, now a lawyer in Cleveland who still counts Sullivan among her
best friends, said in an interview. She recalled Sullivan’s decision to learn
two foreign languages — French and Spanish — as a teen and his unusual
fascination with Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, at the time the largest social
reform plan in modern history.
A few years
later, when Sullivan would visit Rathke at Georgetown, their idea of fun was
playing “the senator game” on the steps of the Supreme Court, she said.
“One person
would pretend to be the senator, and run up the steps and wave to the people,
while another person would play the reporter, and the third would be the
senator’s handler and just say, ‘the senator has no comment,’” Rathke said.
“That was it. That was the game. We played it late at night so no one would see
us being so goofy.”
Back during
one of his first nights at Yale, a “spirited” evening debate about German
versus American nationalism — which lasted until 7 the next morning — gave
Sullivan’s roommates an early taste of what it would be like to live with him.
“I challenged Jake once to see who could finish ‘Eichmann in Jerusalem’ first,”
recalled his college roommate Sherlock Grigsby, referring to the book by Hannah
Arendt that introduced the phrase “banality of evil.”
“I thought
I was pacing myself pretty well and figured Jake was so busy he wouldn’t be
able to keep up,” Grigsby said. “Turns out he beat me easily. I didn’t
challenge him after that.”
Sullivan
graduated from Yale in 1998 with a degree in political science and was awarded
a Rhodes scholarship to study at Oxford, where he graduated in 2000 with a
master’s degree in international relations. That same year, he came in second
place in the 2000 world debating championship — a vindication of sorts after
not making the Yale debate team his freshman year, Rigsby said. He then
enrolled at Yale for law school and graduated with a JD in 2003.
Was there
anything Jake was just plain bad at?
“He’s
possibly the world’s worst driver,” Rathke mused. “He errs on the side of going
really slow and doesn't believe the lane lines are talking to him.”
Sullivan
went back to Minnesota after law school to work at the law firm Faegre &
Benson and later as chief counsel for Sen. Amy Klobuchar. It was Klobuchar who
introduced him to Clinton, for whom he started working during her first run at
the presidency in 2008.
Clinton’s upset
loss to Barack Obama could have been a rare career setback, but as usual
Sullivan landed on his feet: He went on to become the youngest director of
policy planning in State Department history after serving as Clinton’s deputy
chief of staff there and stayed on in government after Clinton stepped down as
secretary, serving as then-Vice President Biden’s national security adviser.
And throughout it all, he made sure to find time every year to attend the Final
Four, his friends said.
Sullivan
has managed to avoid much of the sharp criticism other top Obama-era officials,
such as Ben Rhodes, have faced from conservatives — perhaps because he lacks
his former colleagues’ appetite for partisan combat.
A former
White House colleague noted Sullivan’s outreach to groups and think tanks like
the Foundation for Defense of Democracies that vehemently opposed the Iran
deal. FDD’s chief executive Mark Dubowitz, a harsh critic of the deal, has
described Sullivan as the “sharpest guy on the [Iran] issue I know.”
In the
White House, Sullivan was known for his insistence on questioning the
assumptions behind a given policy — “welcoming 'devil's advocate' discussions,
gaming out third- and fourth-order effects, and reframing issues to bring new
questions to light,” said Michael Carpenter, a former Biden foreign policy
adviser who worked with him.
In 2016,
Sullivan left his relative comfort zone of national security and global affairs
to work for Clinton as a senior policy adviser to her campaign — an experience
that exposed him to the politics of everything from health care to gun control
to immigration. He has since homed in on a philosophy that happens to fit
seamlessly with Biden’s political message: that the strength of U.S. foreign
policy and national security lies primarily in a thriving American middle
class, whose prosperity is endangered by the very transnational threats the
Trump administration has sought to downplay or ignore.
Reflecting
on his time in the Obama White House, Sullivan said he felt more could have
been done there, too, to put the average American on the agenda in the
Situation Room on a regular basis. And he paused for a long moment when asked
how the rise of Trump and Trumpism had affected his worldview, attuning him
more, for example, to the populist tide at home that he may have missed while
focusing on international nuclear negotiations, peace deals and trade treaties.
“When you
spend years in government working on the Iran deal, or working on the
Asia-Pacific rebalance, or working on issues related to the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process, it’s not that you completely lose sight of what’s happening on
the home front — but your focus is more on other things,” Sullivan said. “I do
think that the 2016 campaign had an impact on my thinking, but it wasn’t all
about Trump. It was about the vigorous debate the Democrats had in the primary.
It was about a recognition, as I left national security and entered a domestic
political conversation, about how profoundly such a large segment of our
country felt their government wasn’t working for them.”
Sullivan
caveats that he doesn’t believe such economic anxiety was the sole driver of
Trump’s 2016 victory, which he says was also fueled by appeals to identity and
isolationism. But the campaign gave him a “crash course,” he said, in the
importance of bringing issues of inequality, dislocation and a disconnect
between working people and their government to “every table in the White House
— including in the Situation Room.”
So what
will a Sullivan-led National Security Council look like? It won’t be too big or
micromanaging, Sullivan insists — criticisms that dogged the Obama NSC, which
stood accused of stepping on the prerogatives of Cabinet agencies, be it by
setting troop levels or insisting on signing off on individual drone strikes.
“I see my
job as fundamentally about supporting and lifting up the work of the broader
national security team in service of the president-elect’s mission and
strategy,” he said. “My goal is to have a process that is able to give sufficient
direction, but then empower the departments and agencies to be the tip of the
spear to carry that out.”
“He is
unlikely to be confined to traditional structures,” said former Obama NSC
official Salman Ahmed. “He has long argued persuasively that these issues don't
fit neatly within the bureaucratic lens.”
The early
years of Obama’s NSC were often tense, particularly under retired Gen. Jim
Jones, an outsider who often clashed with the coterie of political aides around
the president and resigned just before the 2010 midterms.
Among the
many challenges Sullivan will confront immediately, knowing colleagues like
incoming White House chief of staff Ron Klain won’t be one of them. “I’d argue
no two people know each other better, have worked more closely, overlapped more
or have a better working relationship on Day One than any chief of
staff/national security adviser pair before them,” said Reines.
“They all
worked together at one level down in the Obama administration,” another former
Obama White House official said. “They are all friends — they’re not strangers,
not rivals, and at the very least are all known commodities to each other.”
One could argue
that might make the team insular, prone to the kind of groupthink that can lead
to mistakes and missed opportunities. Mike Pompeo, the outgoing secretary of
State, has already mocked his successors for allegedly living in “a bit of a
fantasy world” and for practicing “multilateralism for the sake of hanging out
with your buddies at a cool cocktail party.”
The former
Obama White House official said the preexisting relationships among the Biden
crew will make them effective — unlike the early days of the Trump presidency,
which was plagued by rivalries, competing media leaks, backstabbing and
constant staff turnover.
For all
Sullivan’s innate caution, he seems inclined to break sharply with his
predecessors’ emphasis on a traditional definition of U.S. national security:
tanks and missiles, grand summits and spy satellites.
The “major
focus” of the Biden NSC’s work, at least initially, will be on beating the
coronavirus pandemic and restructuring the NSC to make public health a
permanent national security priority, Sullivan said. China will also be put on
notice, he added.
“The way
you actually make sure this doesn't happen again is by sending a very clear
message to China that the United States and the rest of the world will not
accept a circumstance in which we do not have an effective public health
surveillance system, with an international dimension, in China and across the
world going forward,” Sullivan said. A key theme Sullivan repeatedly returns to
is the restoration of alliances and partnerships that were neglected or spurned
under Trump.
“Unlike the
policy of the last few years, we will be able to rally the rest of the world
behind us” on key foreign policy and national security issues, such as
pressuring Iran to come back into compliance with the nuclear deal so that the
U.S. can reenter negotiations, Sullivan said.
He is
similarly optimistic about one of his loftiest goals: “to rally our allies to
combat corruption and kleptocracy, and to hold systems of authoritarian
capitalism accountable for greater transparency and participation in a
rules-based system.”
That effort
will need to begin at home — as has been well documented, the world’s
kleptocratic regimes depend heavily on money laundering networks that commonly
extend into Western centers of global finance like New York and London, aided
by lax incorporation rules in places like Delaware.
But as one
former Obama administration official put it, the hardest task for Biden and by
extension Sullivan will be cleaning up the “shattered glass” left by the Trump
administration, along with an international community that has grown weary of
the whiplash induced by America’s political dramas.
“It’s a
different world now,” said Ambassador Dennis Ross, a veteran diplomat who
worked with Sullivan in the Obama White House. “But Jake brings experience and
personal relationships that are indispensable.”
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