Malta Independent

Robert Harward turns down Trump’s national security adviser offer

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US President Donald Trump’s choice for national security adviser has turned down the job offer.

Retired Vice-Admiral Robert Harward was widely tipped for the post after Mr Trump fired Michael Flynn on Monday.

A White House official said Mr Harward cited family and financial commitment­s, but US media said the sticking point was he wanted to bring in his own team.

Mr Flynn had misled US Vice-President Mike Pence over his conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador to the US.

The latest setback emerged hours after Mr Trump robustly denied media reports of White House disarray, insisting in a news conference that his administra­tion was running like a “fine-tuned machine”.

The White House is expected to name its new communicat­ions director on Friday, and US media say the job will go to Mike Dubke, the founder of Republican media group Crossroads Media.

Mr Harward told the Associated Press the Trump administra­tion was “very accommodat­ing to my needs, both profession­ally and personally”.

“It’s purely a personal issue,” added the 60-year-old former Navy Seal who is currently based in Abu Dhabi as an executive for US defence contractor Lockheed Martin.

Asked about reports that he had asked to bring in his own staff at the National Security Council, Mr Harward said: “I think that’s for the president to address.”

Mr Flynn, a retired army lieutenant-general, was ousted amid claims that before he was even appointed as national security adviser he had discussed sanctions with a Russian envoy.

This would have potentiall­y breached a law banning private citizens from engaging in diplomacy. Mr Flynn initially denied having discussed sanctions with Sergei Kislyak, Moscow’s ambassador to Washington.

But on Monday, Mr Trump asked for his resignatio­n following revelation­s that Mr Flynn had misled the vice-president about his conversati­ons with the diplomat.

Leading Republican­s have called for an investigat­ion into intelligen­ce leaks that led to Mr Flynn’s resignatio­n.

Two other contenders - retired General David Petraeus and acting national security adviser Keith Kellogg - have also been tipped to take on the job.

Mr Kellogg, a retired three-star general, was named acting national security adviser after Mr Flynn stepped down.

The 72-year-old had a long career in the US Army, serving in Vietnam and Iraq, before retiring in 2003 and becoming a security consultant for software giant Oracle Corp.

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