Bangkok Post

Tillerson highlights spending cutbacks

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NAIROBI: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson laid a wreath on Sunday at the August 7th Memorial Park here that commemorat­es a suicide truck bombing 20 years ago that killed more than 200 people. That attack may have done more to transform the State Department than any other event of the past 50 years.

In the wake of the 1998 attack, the department hired tens of thousands of security guards for posts around the world and made other changes that today cost nearly $7 billion annually, which is almost half of the $15 billion that Mr Tillerson wants eliminated from the department’s budget.

Mr Tillerson has twice proposed slashing the department’s budget to about $35 billion from about $50 billion, saying that doing so would return spending levels to those before the attacks of Sept 11, 2001. He is expected to testify on Capitol Hill in the next two weeks to explain his reasons for the proposed cuts, which have received a chilly reception in Congress.

Critics say those cuts are misguided and could even cost lives.

Mr Tillerson is in the midst of a fivenation tour of Africa, his first as secretary of state, and the visit to the memorial park — an island of green space where the damaged US Embassy once stood — was the most somber event of the trip. He laid a wreath at a wall with the names of the victims inscribed and then gave brief remarks.

“As all of you well know, in 1998 terrorists thought they could demoralise and destroy the Kenyan and American people by attacking the US Embassy here in Nairobi,” Mr Tillerson said. “Of course, they were wrong. Nearly 20 years later, we meet here to honor those who we lost and those who were injured.”

Mr Tillerson has made safety a focus of his tenure, saying in nearly every speech to employees that he considers safety not just a policy but a value.

The bombing of the embassy here — and, on the same day, one in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania — showed that terrorist groups could target US facilities all over the world, even in countries deemed relatively secure.

“We realised that our people weren’t safe anywhere,” said Bill A Miller, who was acting assistant secretary for diplomatic security until last year.

The State Department now has 45,000 security employees, representi­ng more than half of the department’s 75,000 employees, Mr Miller said. The security bureau’s budget is more than $5.8 billion, with security constructi­on costs adding another roughly $1.5 billion annually.

Michael Evanoff, the current assistant secretary of state for diplomatic security, said Mr Tillerson had never suggested he would cut the department’s security budget. “At no time has he ever said to me he wants DS to look at cutting,” Mr Evanoff said, referring to the security bureau. “He’s always been very supportive.”

Without cuts to the department’s ballooning security expenses, Mr Tillerson would need to look elsewhere.

The other major programme that has grown since the 1990s is the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known as Pepfar, which was begun in 2003. Along with a malaria programme, Pepfar costs

about $8 billion and has been widely credited with treating much of the African continent.

In Kenya alone, the programme costs about $1 billion and delivers antiretrov­iral drugs to 1.1 million people.

Mr Tillerson, who has proposed some cuts to Pepfar, was due to visit an HIV/AIDS clinic on Saturday, but the visit was cancelled because he was sick.

 ??  ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks to survivors after laying a wreath during a ceremony at Memorial Park in honour of the victims of the deadly 1998 US Embassy bombing in Nairobi, Kenya on Sunday.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks to survivors after laying a wreath during a ceremony at Memorial Park in honour of the victims of the deadly 1998 US Embassy bombing in Nairobi, Kenya on Sunday.

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