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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump humiliates Rex Tillerson for the last time - WaPo Editorial Board
By Editorial Board March 13 at 1:49 PM
REX TILLERSON was poorly cast as secretary of state. The veteran oil executive never grasped some of the essentials of diplomacy, including the importance of public communication. He badly damaged the State Department by ignoring its professionals, scores of whom departed, while conducting a prolonged and ill-advised reorganization. He disregarded American principles by playing downhuman rights, and he proved ineffective as a negotiator whether with U.S. allies like the Persian Gulf states or adversaries such as Russia.
None of those weaknesses, however, appear to explain why Mr. Tillerson was abruptly dismissed, via tweet, by President Trump on Tuesday the last of many humiliations the president inflicted on his top diplomat. Rather, Mr. Trump suggested that he and Mr. Tillerson were not really thinking the same on key foreign policy issues, which is true. Mr. Tillerson resisted the presidents steps toward voiding the nuclear deal with Iran and the Paris climate treaty, and opposed moving the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. When Mr. Tillerson spoke in favor of diplomacy with North Korea, Mr. Trump tweeted that he was wasting his time; then, the same day Mr. Tillerson said negotiations with the regime of Kim Jong Un might be a long way off, Mr. Trump agreed to a summit meeting.
Most disturbingly, Mr. Trump would not back up the tough stances that Mr. Tillerson struck, with ample reason, against the misdeeds of Russian ruler Vladimir Putin. Most recently the secretary of state said he agreed with the British government that Russia should be held responsible for an attack on British soil with deadly nerve gas. But Mr. Trump on Tuesday was equivocal, suggesting the administration still needed to get the facts straight.
Mike Pompeo, the CIA director and former member of Congress whom Mr. Trump nominated as his next secretary of state, is more likely to be in tune with the White House. In particular, he shares Mr. Trumps contempt for the Iran nuclear deal, and he has spoken of regime change in North Korea as an objective. He reportedly has forged a rapport with Mr. Trump and has been better regarded as a manager at the CIA than Mr. Tillerson has been at State. At best, Mr. Pompeo could restore morale and professionalism at Foggy Bottom; a good start would be filling the dozens of important positions that remain vacant.
Mr. Pompeo will nevertheless start with some steep challenges. Mr. Trump is two months away from the next deadline for renewing the suspension of sanctions on Iran, and the summit meeting he committed to with North Korea was said to be possible by the end of May. Britain is looking to the United States for support in responding to the nerve-gas attack. On all those issues, Mr. Trump is courting disaster from a confrontation with Tehran for which the United States is ill-prepared, to a rift with its closest ally.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/trump-humiliates-rex-tillerson-for-the-last-time/2018/03/13/ac8028c6-26ce-11e8-bc72-077aa4dab9ef_story.html
dalton99a
(81,073 posts)Capperdan
(490 posts)or the Trump re-election campaign?