Susan Rice rumored to be top choice for US security adviser
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                  Susan Rice rumored to be top choice for US security adviser

                  US envoy to the UN Susan Rice [file] Photo: Brendan McDermid / Reuters

                  Susan Rice rumored to be top choice for US security adviser

                  11.03.2013, Israel and the World

                  Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the UN who was forced to withdraw her name from consideration as secretary of state under pressure from Republicans, is now rumored to be a top choice for the next national security adviser.
                  Rice has long been a close aide to US President Barack Obama and was widely considered to be his first pick to head the State Department. But GOP senators threatened to block her from the job after her controversial public statements on the attack that killed the US ambassador in Benghazi, Libya this September, pushing her out of contention and clearing the way for John Kerry to get the job.
                  The current national security adviser, Tom Donilon, is still expected to remain in his job for some time. But Rice has been seen as a likely replacement at some point during Obama's second term since the job does not require Senate approval and therefore wouldn't be subject to Republican obstruction.
                  A spate of news accounts Monday raised the prospect of her taking over the White House adviser role as early as the summer, when the United States will assume the presidency of the UN Security Council.
                  Rice has received plaudits from many in the Jewish community who appreciate her support for Israel at the UN in the face of many critical resolutions and votes.
                  "She has been consistently sympathetic, supportive and in solidarity with the Jewish community," said Jason Isaacson, director of governement and international affairs for the American Jewish Committee, an organization which has been actively involved in UN matters related to Israel.
                  Among other examples, Isaacson recalled her leadership in refusing to participate in the Durban Review Conference in 2009 after anti-Israel language was included in a key conference text and the vote against recongition of Palestinian statehood at the UN in November. "Ambassador Rice has been consistently accessible to and open to the concerns of the Jewish community," Isaacson said.
                  He added that she's all been "an outspoken spokesperson for the positions of the United States, not just the Jewish community." There have been some in the pro-Israel community who have critized Rice's actions at times, however.
                  Elliott Abrams, a White House Middle East advisor to George W. Bush, took issue with comments she made criticizing Israeli settlement activity as part of the "explanation of veto" that accompanied her casting the decisive vote against a 2011 Security Council resolution that would have condemned the activity outright.
                  "It's hard to recall such a vehement statement against Israel," Abrams wrote at the time on the website of the Council on Foreign Relations, where he is now a senior fellow.
                  He criticized her emotive and undiplomatic language, though he chalked up her statement more to the direction taken by the US administration than Rice herself. Late last year Rice came under the heaviest fire from GOP critics. Republican senators announced they didn't believe she was fit for the secretary of state job after she held a round of TV interviews following the Benghazi attack in which she relayed administration talking points that were later shown to be inaccurate. But those senators would be powerless to stop her becoming the national security advisor, a crucial post particularly in light of the tight control the Obama White House has kept on foreign policy formulation. Given Rice's close relationship with Obama, should she become national security advisor she could be poised to have a more powerful role in policy-making than Kerry.

                   

                  By HILARY LEILA KRIEGER, JPOST CORRESPONDENT

                  JPost.com