Michele Flournoy, Pentagon’s highest-ranking woman, is making her mark on foreign policy
On the surface, her personal trajectory is somewhat incongruous. She went <a href="http://zhengxing.99mr.com/diaomei/"><strong>雕眉费用</strong></a> from living in one of the most madcap subcultures in the country — 1970s Hollywood — to one of the most guarded — the Pentagon.But she came by her passion for public service honestly. Her uncle once mentioned in passing that her father was some sort of World War II hero. “But my father never talked about it,” she said recently over a dinner of palak paneer at an Indian restaurant in downtown Bethesda. “And he died when I was just 14.”Soon after, Flournoy’s interest in living abroad — she spent a summer during high school in Belgium — and her fascination with the nuclear arms race of the Reagan years took her far from the sitcom sets of Paramount Studios.Today, she holds <a href="http://zhengxing.99mr.com/yinjingwanqujiaozheng/"><strong>阴茎弯曲</strong></a> the title of undersecretary of defense for policy. Like her father, she avoids boasting about her accomplishments, although she’s navigating some of the most vexing foreign policy challenges in the history of the Pentagon. And she’s something of a mystery to outsiders. Flournoy’s job as a behind-the-scenes policy player is growing more public since the departure of Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates. Incoming secretary Leon E. Panetta is seen as a Pentagon outsider and Flournoy as the voice of calm guiding the transition, those who work around her say. At the Pentagon, her portfolio includes overseeing the deployment of U.S. special forces to help train the Ugandan military to fight rebel groups, responding to the unfolding turmoil in Yemen and Syria, implementing widespread defense budget cuts and, on top of it all, engineering the drawdown of U.S.-led troops from Afghanistan. She’s also the mother of three children younger than 14 and part of a new generation of high-ranking <a href="http://zhengxing.99mr.com/rutouzaizaoshu/"><strong>乳头再*术</strong></a> female leaders at the Pentagon, once such a male-dominated workplace that when she and a friend organized a lunch for senior Pentagon women in 1993, the group filled just one table.“For weeks after it was this huge conspiracy about what we were talking about,” she said, recalling the period when she was a Defense Department official in the Clinton administration. “Fast <a href="http://inbookmark.com/mybookmark.php"><strong>爱贝芙注射</strong></a> forward to today, and you could fill an entire dining room with other key women leaders.” More brains than bluster Flournoy, 50, is affectionately known as The Other Michele, a reference to first lady Michelle Obama, by those who work with her. Younger women at the Pentagon say they look to her as their trailblazer. But she’s little-known outside the Pentagon and Washington’s foreign policy think-tank circles, despite the fact that many predict she will be the first female secretary of defense.
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