After Brose
By Peter Feaver One of the first things they tell you when you take a post in the administration, any administration: You are not irreplaceable because no one is irreplaceable. We are about to test that proposition at ForeignPolicy.com as we say farewell to Chris Brose. If anyone is irreplaceable, it would be Chris. Denizens ...
By Peter Feaver
By Peter Feaver
One of the first things they tell you when you take a post in the administration, any administration: You are not irreplaceable because no one is irreplaceable. We are about to test that proposition at ForeignPolicy.com as we say farewell to Chris Brose.
If anyone is irreplaceable, it would be Chris. Denizens of Shadow Government will recognize him as the most prolific blogger showing equal parts generosity, wit, insight, and, upon occasion, the well-placed dagger. But what is less publicly visible has been his behind-the-scenes cat-herding, without which Shadow Gov would have been all Shadow and no Gov.
It will quite literally take two people to fill his shoes, and even then Will Inboden and I will be hard-pressed to keep this particular ship of state moving forward at a respectable clip (to indulge in a mixed metaphor that would have provoked a deserved howl from Chris). However, we are not irreplaceable either, for Shadow Government has a very deep bench — and it is about to get deeper (more to come).
So let’s bid farewell to Chris, but let’s warn him we will cast our eye from time to time over toward the Senate to make sure that the folks in the real "loyal opposition" are fulfilling their responsibilities well. And let’s remind him that he always has a home out here in the virtual boondocks, because most in-and-outers spend most of their time on the outs and Shadow Government is a great place in which to be "out."
Peter D. Feaver is a professor of political science and public policy at Duke University, where he directs the Program in American Grand Strategy.
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