Clinton, Trump and their Lebanese American advisers

WASHINGTON – Both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have appointed Lebanese Americans to serve as foreign advisers on their quest to the White House.

Clinton has sought consultation from Peter Daou, a longtime confidant and Democratic Party fundraiser, while Trump has designated FOX News commentator Walid Phares as a foreign policy adviser.

Peter Daou

Daou is a former adviser to Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, and CEO of ShareBlue, a left-leaning political news peter-daou-1-x-1website. He also served as a senior consultant to the Clinton Foundation’s Global Initiative.

According to his website, Daou was born in Beirut and lived through the Lebanese Civil War. At 15, he joined the Lebanese Forces and received combat training for three years, he says.

He once tweeted: “What frustrates rightwing haters when I engage them is that I served in the Lebanese Forces militia in Beirut, so they can’t use that card.”

Daou has organized media roundtables for President Bill Clinton and has designed digital strategies for the UN Foundation, Department of Energy and Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Walid Phares

Phares is a FOX News commentator and longtime conservative analyst on global terrorism and foreign affairs. walid-phares-1-x-1Prior to FOX, Phares provided commentary to NBC, and has testified before the U.S. Congress, and committees of the U.S. State, Justice, Defense and Homeland Security.

Similar to Daou, Phares served as a civil war consultant to the Lebanese Forces and as head of the party’s External and Diaspora Affairs Office.

In a controversial policy article for an Israeli think tank, Phares once proposed Southern Lebanon becomes a state of its own and becomes a close ally to Israel.

“A Christian enclave is needed somewhere in Lebanon,” he wrote.

Phares previously served as foreign policy adviser to Mitt Romney for his 2012 presidential campaign.

U.S. presidential candidate worked in Lebanon during civil war

(NEW YORK) — U.S. presidential candidate and former U.S. Senator Jim Webb won an Emmy award in 1983 for a special report he produced in Lebanon during the country’s civil war.

The former Democratic senator from Virginia is virtually invisible from media coverage of the 2016 presidential race, pulling in only 2 percent of support among Democrats, according to a CBS poll.

But his history offers an interesting perspective on the U.S. role in international conflicts. The 1983 report, which aired on “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour” was introduced as a “personal commentary.”

Webb, who graduated from the Georgetown University Law Center, previously served as Secretary of the Navy, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, and as a Marine Corps officer.

PBS sent Webb, a former journalist, to Beirut to examine the disconnect that can exist between decision makers in Washington, and military officials who implement policies on the ground.

“The military does not make policy. That responsibility belongs to members of Congress and, of course, the President,” he said in the video essay. “The military simply implements their policy, often at great cost. A politician might suffer bad press or a lost election if things go wrong. The military man suffers the loss of his friends, early and often.”

His extensive reporting brought him back on PBS to comment on the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing, which killed 241 American military servicemen that year.

Today, Webb offers an interesting prospect on conflicts in the Middle East, warning against adding boots on the ground in Syria.

“We need to be very careful,” Webb told The Washington Post in a September 2014 interview. He compared the situation in Syria to the civil war that raged Lebanon and drew U.S. involvement, calling Syria “Lebanon on steroids.”

WATCH Webb’s 1983 report from Beirut:

Send this to friend