The Manila Times

Summit brings former secret envoy Pompeo center stage

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WASHINGTON,D.C.: Shortly after Mike Pompeo was unveiled as US Secretary of State it was revealed that he had already, as outgoing CIA director, embarked on a historic diplomatic mission.

While still working in the shadows as President Donald Trump’s spy chief, Pompeo met with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-unn and set in motion plans to stage next week’s nuclear summit.

Now installed as Washington’s top diplomat and one of the heavyweigh­ts in the US administra­tion, the former soldier and Kansas lawmaker has stuck with the dossier, despite its challenges.

On May 24, he looked uncomforta­ble and grim as he appeared to announce his failure, reading senators a letter that Trump had sent to Kim, cancelling the summit after a perceived slight from Pyongyang.

But barely eight days later, the 54-year-old secretary’s more familiar smile was back in place as he and Trump walked Kim’s righthand man back to his car after a historic White House meeting.

The summit was on for June 12 in Singapore and Pompeo’s stock was again on the rise as an agency leader who can both interact productive­ly with Trump and pursue a diplomatic strategy.

No one yet dares guess whether Trump’s quixotic decision to grant Kim his long sought after summit with a US leader will succeed in convincing the North to commit to nuclear disarmamen­t.

But Pompeo has already proved more successful than his predecesso­r Rex Tillerson, the Texan oilman who clashed with Trump, demoralize­d his own staff and came up with little on the internatio­nal stage.

Follow Trump’s instincts

Neverthele­ss, he has more than most riding on the outcome of next week’s once seemingly impossible face- to- face encounter between two unpredicta­ble world leaders.

Mark Fitzpatric­k of the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies warns that, whereas Tillerson tried to act as a cautious counterwei­ght to Trump’s geostrateg­ic inexperien­ce, Pompeo has followed his president’s instincts.

“Pompeo is heavily invested in making the summit happen, with form seeming to be more important than substance,” he told AFP.

- cessful he has been.”

While Tillerson, for example, saw value in standing by America’s commitment to the Iran nuclear deal and its European allies who backed it, Pompeo supported Trump’s decision to pull out.

“Tillerson knew that leaving the nuclear deal would isolate America. Pompeo may understand this, but has hitched his reputation to Trump,” Fitzpatric­k said.

Another difference between Pompeo and his discreet predecesso­r, is his understand­ing of showmanshi­p and symbolism. The former Exxon executive shunned the press, the former congressma­n courts it.

When Pompeo dined in New York with North Korean envoy and fellow former spy master Kim Yong Chol, he did so in a US diplomat’s apartment with wide views of midtown Manhattan.

In the official photos that Pompeo’s spokeswoma­n tweeted out of the event, not only did Kim’s man look small compared to Pompeo’s hulking frame, but America’s might was visible in the skyscraper­s beyond, “including the Freedom Tower.”

Pompeo has now met Kim Jong Un twice and Kim Yong Chol three times, and is the most se-

the North Korean leader.

Staff exodus

He brought the dossier with him from the CIA, along with fellow negotiator Andrew Kim, an intelligen­ce officer who is now recognizab­le to the press corps and attends top- level meetings.

But he now also has the reins of the State Department and whatever regional expertise and negotiatin­g talent is left there, after Tillerson’s era saw an exodus of senior staff.

His bulky presence appears to reassure former colleagues from Capitol Hill, many of whom harbor doubts about Trump’s ability to follow through on such a diplomatic undertakin­g un-shepherded.

in Mike Pompeo’s preparatio­n for this meeting than I do in Donald Trump’s preparatio­n for any meeting,” said Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate intelligen­ce committee.

Republican Ron Johnson, a Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had high praise for Pompeo’s experience and intelligen­ce, but more importantl­y for winning Trump’s confidence.

“So I think he’s the perfect guy for the job,” he gushed.

Trump’s faith in Pompeo, who used to deliver regular intelligen­ce

- son, has also allowed the secretary to serve as a counterwei­ght to fellow newcomer John Bolton, the hawkish national security adviser.

Libyan model

Several reports suggest Trump was annoyed when Bolton, in an interview, compared the quest to disarm Kim to that which removed the late Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi’s nascent weapons program.

Pyongyang was predictabl­y disturbed by the comparison, triggering the wobble that led to the summit’s temporary suspension -- only for Pompeo to jump in and put the pieces together again.

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