The Malta Independent 30 April 2024, Tuesday
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Resigning US Ambassador ‘not allowed to speak to the President’

Malta Independent Sunday, 24 April 2011, 00:00 Last update: about 11 years ago

Doug Kmiec, the prominent conservative supporter of President Barack Obama who submitted his resignation as the US ambassador to Malta last week, says the State Department improperly clamped down on articles he wrote about his Catholic faith and his admiration for President Ronald Reagan.

The former Justice Department official, one of Obama’s most prominent conservative and pro-life supporters, spoke to website TPM on Thursday by phone from the US embassy in Malta.

He said it was the first time he had spoken to a reporter since his resignation letter was accepted out of respect to the request of the State Department that he not comment to the media until the President had had a chance to act on his letter.

Now that the State Department has informed him that Obama has accepted his resignation – and moved Kmiec’s departure up from August to May – he is speaking out against the bureaucrats he says have treated him unfairly.

The White House had no comment, referring calls to the State Department, where a spokesman would only confirm that Kmiec had resigned but would not say when that resignation became effective.

During the impeachment of Bill Clinton, Kmiec, then a law professor at Notre Dame, was one of the highest profile conservative legal scholars advocating impeachment, making regular national TV appearances to comment on Clinton’s political and legal troubles.

Kmiec later went to Pepperdine and Catholic University but rejoined Pepperdine at around the time Clinton tormenter Ken Starr was the law school dean. Kmiec’s career came full circle, in a way, when he became an ambassador under Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Kmiec says he has tremendous respect for Obama but he was disappointed that his request to speak to the President directly had gone unfulfilled.

As first reported by Michael Sean Winters of the National Catholic Reporter, Kmiec submitted his letter of resignation to Hillary Clinton in a letter dated 16 April. The letter came in the wake of a State Department Inspector General report on the Malta embassy which said that Kmiec’s “outside activities have detracted from his attention to core mission goals”.

Kmiec’s outside writings and speeches, according to the OIG report, have “created friction with principal officials in Washington”. The report said that Kmiec believed that he “was given a special mandate to promote President Obama’s interfaith initiatives”, and “has devoted considerable time to writing articles... and to presenting his views on subjects outside the bilateral portfolio”.

But Kmiec says that his outside writings and speeches – much of which focused on interfaith dialogue – were part of the mission of the US embassy in Malta, a country with an overwhelmingly Catholic population, and had a “highly positive effect” on bilateral relations.

“What is really heartbreaking is not to be able to speak to the President about this, about the distortion – intentional or unintentional, clumsy or politically motivated somehow – by the Inspector General,” Kmiec told TPM. “I love this work so much, and was so honoured to be doing this for the country and for this President in particular.

“The thing that is so saddening to end this way, is that I haven’t lost any of my enthusiasm for the President’s ability to lead the country. I have seen it applauded and greatly appreciated here and in international settings,” he said.

“I mean, if I could get Barack Obama to fly into the Malta airport for 30 seconds, I think I’d be canonised. The man is extremely respected, and I think everything we’ve done has just magnified that respect, and in an honest way.”

Kmiec says that anyone looking for evidence that the Obama administration intended him to maintain an interfaith dialogue does not have to look any further than his swearing-in ceremony, at which Kmiec was introduced by the head of the President’s Faith-Based and Neighbourhood Partnership Programme.

Kmiec said it was no secret that interfaith dialogue was a part of his larger mission. But when he got to work at the State Department, he quickly faced obstacles, including the close regulation of his outside writings from a personal perspective and the cancellation of a conference he had organised.

Shortly after he started working in Malta, Kmiec began organising a conference for academics and diplomats on interfaith dialogue. After invitations had gone out, he received an email from a State Department official saying that the conference was off and that they would appreciate it if he never used the expression “faith-based” again.

“It’s not clear to me whether this was natural hostility or confusion or something else, but my supposition is that somebody was convinced that the expression “faith-based” violated the Constitution, but that “interfaith” didn’t violate the Constitution,” Kmiec told TPM. “The slice of that cheese is so thin that I can’t make sense of it. They’re about 25 years behind in terms of the courts’ jurisprudence on the First Amendment.”

One particularly offensive overreach, says Kmiec, was when State Department officials edited an article he wrote memorialising his father in a way that changed his father’s views.

“I thought it was highly offensive to have my father’s memorial piece edited by the Department of State, and indeed what was edited out was reference to his faith and mine and also there was some substantive disagreement with views my father held, so they changed them,” Kmiec said. “So there was a certain aggravation there”.

Kmiec said that when the inspectors left after their visit in the autumn, he told them he would not go out of his way to go outside his embassy’s mission.

“In fairness to them, and in fairness to me, my conception and their conception of mission must have been different, because I had always assumed and had no reason to think that this had become a categorical rule” that he could not write about interfaith issues, Kmiec told TPM. “Nor did I think I had lost the benefit of the regulations that said in your personal time, you can write personal things so long as you identify them as such.”

He also wrote a piece for the LA Times for what would have been Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday that the State Department rejected because it was not related to his mission.

At the end of their visit to the Malta embassy in the autumn, the inspectors gave Kmiec a draft report of his progress that Kmiec said he was pretty happy with.

“The embassy report was glowing; it had 15 minor suggestions in them... and my personal evaluation – I mean if I were writing it myself, I think I walk on water, so I would have used bigger adjectives and more adverbs – but I was quite satisfied with my report,” Kmiec said.

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“But when the folks got back to Washington, apparently someone said ‘well, you didn’t hammer the ambassador enough’, because all of a sudden there was a new and tough and ‘improved’ version that we got a copy of that had all of this business about outside activities in it,” said Kmiec. “And it seemed that things that were positively stated about me and my post suddenly became much more qualified and turned into a negative. And when I saw that, I was quite alarmed.”

In his letter to Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, Kmiec said the OIG had a “flawed and narrow vision of our diplomatic mission.

“As a consequence, my voice has been prevented from speaking; my pen has been enjoined from writing; and my actions have been confined to the ministerial,” Kmiec wrote. “You deserve better, but until these rigid, and rigidly narrow, perspectives are overcome, you and the President are being deprived of the intelligent insight of much of your Embassy’s work. Should you want to challenge this organisational difficulty, I am at your service.”

Despite his issues with his treatment by the State Department, Kmiec – who authored a book arguing that Catholics can support Obama – said he is still a supporter of the President.

“I see the President, from very early on in his administration, trying to provide pre-natal care for pregnant women and providing for the needs of those who don’t have health care, just as he said he would, providing an executive order saying this money wouldn’t be used for abortion practices, just as he said he would,” Kmiec told TPM.

In his resignation letters to President Obama and Secretary Clinton, obtained by the National Catholic Reporter, which first broke the news over the weekend (LINK: http://ncronline.org/news/politics/douglas-kmiec-us-ambassador-malta-resigns), Kmiec was unrepentant.

“An unfortunate OIG report published last week claims… unsupported speculation that someone doing as much writing as I have done could not have also been devoted to the embassy mission. The contrary proof, Madame Secretary, is in the strength of our embassy. Our work is careful, thorough, and timely, and I am fully apprised of all of it, and of course, fully supported by men and women of great dedication and ability,” he wrote to Secretary Clinton.

Ambassador Kmiec suggested in his resignation letter that the Inspector General’s criticism of his work was a payback for a position he took in 1989 while working in the Office of Legal Counsel, in which he argued that the IG’s work must be limited to investigating waste, fraud, and abuse.

“That opinion stung the OIG and I suspect I have just experienced a ‘sting-back’,” he wrote.

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