at
Camp Monteith, Kosovo
Bush administration On November 8, 2006, after the
2006 midterm election, President
George W. Bush announced his intent to nominate Gates to succeed the resigning
Donald Rumsfeld as U.S. Secretary of Defense. Gates was unanimously confirmed by the
United States Senate Armed Services Committee on December 5, 2006. During his confirmation hearing on December 5, 2006, Gates replied to a question that, in his opinion, the United States was neither winning nor losing the war in Iraq. The next day, Gates was confirmed by the full Senate by a margin of 95–2, with Republican Senators
Rick Santorum and
Jim Bunning casting the two dissenting votes and senators
Elizabeth Dole,
Evan Bayh, and
Joe Biden not voting. On December 18, 2006, Gates was sworn in as Secretary of Defense by
White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten at a private
White House ceremony and then by Vice President
Dick Cheney at the Pentagon. in Japan, November 2007 Under the Bush administration, Gates directed the war in Iraq's
troop surge, a marked change in tactics from his predecessor. With violence on the decline in Iraq, in 2008, Gates also began the troop withdrawal of Iraq, a policy continued into the Obama administration. , Admiral
Mike Mullen and General
Jim Mattis in Baghdad, Iraq
Walter Reed Medical Center scandal Several months after his appointment,
The Washington Post published a series of articles beginning February 18, 2007, that brought to the spotlight the
Walter Reed Army Medical Center neglect scandal. As a result of the fallout from the incident, Gates announced the removal of
Secretary of the Army Francis J. Harvey, and later, he approved the removal of Army Surgeon General
Kevin C. Kiley.
Controversy over Joint Chiefs On June 8, 2007, Gates announced that he would not recommend the renomination of
Peter Pace, the
Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, due to anticipated difficulties with the confirmation process. Instead, Gates recommended
Mike Mullen, the
Chief of Naval Operations at the time, to fill the position. Gates stated: "I am no stranger to contentious confirmations, and I do not shrink from them. However, I have decided that at this moment in our history, the nation, our men and women in uniform, and General Pace himself would not be well-served by a divisive ordeal in selecting the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff." Gates referred to Pace as a friend and praised his service as a Marine.
Misshipments of nuclear weapons On June 5, 2008, in response to the findings on Air Force
misshipments of nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons components, Gates announced the resignations of Secretary of the Air Force
Michael Wynne and Air Force Chief of Staff
Michael Moseley. Gates would later write that the USAF was "one of my biggest headaches" during his time in the office.
Obama administration at
the Pentagon in 2009 On December 1, 2008, President-elect Obama announced that Robert Gates would remain in his position as Secretary of Defense during his administration, Gates was the fourteenth Cabinet member in history to serve under two presidents of different parties, and the first to do so as Secretary of Defense. One of the first priorities under President Barack Obama's administration for Gates was a review of U.S. policy and strategy in
Afghanistan. Gates, sixth in the
presidential line of succession, was selected as
designated survivor during Obama's inauguration. On March 1, 2009, he told
David Gregory on
Meet the Press that he would not commit to how long he would serve as Secretary of Defense but implied that he would not serve the entire first term. (D-West Virginia, far right) shakes hands with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, while Sens.
Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont, center right) and
Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) look on. The hearing was held to discuss further funding for the
War in Iraq. While Gates continued the troop withdrawals in Iraq, which already had begun in the Bush administration, he also implemented a rapid, limited surge of troops in Afghanistan in 2009. Robert Gates removed General
David D. McKiernan from command in Afghanistan on May 6, 2009 and replaced him with General
Stanley A. McChrystal. The
Washington Post called it "a rare decision to remove a wartime commander". The
Washington Post described the replacement as one of several replacements of generals who represented the "traditional Army" with generals "who have pressed for the use of counter-insurgency tactics". in March 2011|alt=
Time magazine notes that Gates and U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton have "forged a formidable partnership", speaking frequently, "comparing notes before they go to the White House", meeting with each other weekly and having lunch once a month at either the Pentagon or the State Department. In a March 2010 speech to a NATO conference in Washington, Secretary Gates said that "The demilitarization of Europe—where large swaths of the general public and political class are averse to military force and the risks that go with it—has gone from a blessing in the 20th century to an impediment to achieving real security and lasting peace in the 21st". , at the Ministry of Defense in New Delhi, India, February 27, 2008. Gates also met with the Indian Prime Minister during his trip to the region. In February 2010, Gates announced that the department would lift its ban on women serving on
submarines. Gates also prepared the armed forces for the repeal of the
don't ask, don't tell policy. Since the repeal in 2010, homosexuals are able to serve in the military
openly. In service of that goal, he announced in late March 2010 the approval of new regulations that would make it more difficult to kick gays out of the military. Gates called the guideline changes, which went into effect immediately, a matter of "common sense and common decency" that would be "an important improvement" allowing the Pentagon to apply current law in "a fairer and more appropriate" manner. The Pentagon's legal counsel,
Jeh Johnson, said the new regulations are by no means a moratorium on the current law and stressed that cases would move forward under the new standards. In March 2011, Gates directed the role of the United States armed forces in the
2011 military intervention in Libya. While aboard a military aircraft on March 20, 2011, Gates told the press that "military forces are just one way to bring stability to Libya". to monitor the progress of
Operation Neptune Spear Gates was photographed in the
White House Situation Room photograph taken on May 1, 2011, by
Pete Souza during the raid that killed
Al-Qaeda terrorist organization leader
Osama bin Laden. Gates officially retired as Secretary of Defense on July 1, 2011, and was presented the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award, by President Obama during his retirement ceremony.
Fiscal restraint Gates's tenure with the Obama administration included a huge shift in military spending. In April 2009, Gates proposed a large shift in budget priorities in the U.S. Department of Defense 2010 budget. The budget cuts included many programs geared toward conventional warfare, such as the end of new orders of the
F-22 Raptor and of further development of
Future Combat Systems manned vehicles. These cuts were counterbalanced by increases in funding for programs like the
special forces. Gates called this the "nation's first truly 21st century defense budget". In late April 2010, he suggested the Navy cease funding development of a new multibillion-dollar ballistic missile submarine program on the grounds of cost and relevancy. He suggested the hundreds of billions of dollars would be better spent on a new generation of vessels tailored to the threats and tactics more likely to be faced, noting, "Mark my words, the Navy and Marine Corps must be willing to re-examine and question basic assumptions in light of evolving technologies, new threats and budget realities." In a speech made on May 8, 2010, Gates stated that he would make politically unpopular cuts to the Pentagon bureaucracy in his future budgets. trainees,
NAB Coronado, California, 2010 It was announced in August 2010 that Gates was trying to find $100 billion in Defense savings through to 2015, in order to instill a "culture of savings and restraint" in the military. Secretary Gates said that "It is important that we do not repeat the mistakes of the past, where tough economic times or the winding down of a military campaign leads to steep and unwise reductions in defense". Gates said "As a matter of principle and political reality, the Department of Defense cannot expect America's elected representatives to approve budget increases each year unless we are doing a good job, indeed everything possible, to make every dollar count". These cuts included the closing of the
Joint Forces Command, the redundancy of fifty general and admirals, and the removal of 150 senior civilian positions.
NATO comments On January 16, 2008, Gates was quoted in the
Los Angeles Times as saying NATO forces in southern Afghanistan do not know how to properly combat a guerrilla insurgency and that could be contributing to rising violence in the country. The Netherlands and United Kingdom protested. In a June 10, 2011, speech in Brussels, before NATO, Gates again stated that other NATO members must do more as the United States tackles its budget deficit. He said bluntly that In the past, I've worried openly about NATO turning into a two-tiered alliance: Between members who specialize in "soft" humanitarian, development, peacekeeping and talking tasks, and those conducting the "hard" combat missions. Between those willing and able to pay the price and bear the burdens of alliance commitments, and those who enjoy the benefits of NATO membership—be they security guarantees or headquarters billets—but don't want to share the risks and the costs. This is no longer a hypothetical worry. We are there today. And it is unacceptable. The blunt reality is that there will be dwindling appetite and patience in the U.S. Congress—and in the American body politic writ large—to expend increasingly precious funds on behalf of nations that are apparently unwilling to devote the necessary resources or make the necessary changes to be serious and capable partners in their own defense. Nations apparently willing and eager for American taxpayers to assume the growing security burden left by reductions in European defense budgets. Indeed, if current trends in the decline of European defense capabilities are not halted and reversed, future U.S. political leaders—those for whom the Cold War was not the formative experience that it was for me—may not consider the return on America's investment in NATO worth the cost. ==College chancellor (2011–present)==