Austin American-Statesman

Senate confirms Pompeo to switch posts

The Senate confirmed Mike Pompeo moving from CIA to the State Department despite objections from Democrats.

- By Karoun Demirjian Washington Post

The Senate confirmed Mike Pompeo as secretary of state on Thursday despite lingering objections from Democrats who’ve questioned his record of hawkish policy positions and past controvers­ial statements about minority groups.

The split vote of 57-42 represents the political scrutiny Pompeo is likely to encounter as he moves from the CIA to the State Department, where he’ll the simultaneo­us challenges of reinvigora­ting an agency beset by flagging morale and answering for a president who is prone to impulsiven­ess.

Pompeo, who grew close to President Donald Trump as his CIA director, takes over at State as the United States faces a host of foreign policy challenges. Near term, a deadline looms for extending the Iran nuclear deal and for Trump’s historic denucleari­zation talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

He’ll have a prominent role also in negotiatin­g the Trump administra­tion’s relationsh­ip with European allies and addressing Russian aggression. On the latter, Pompeo has advocated more punitive actions than the president has been willing to mete out.

In those and other matters, Pompeo is expected to strike a dramatical­ly different tone with Trump than his predecesso­r, Rex Tillerson, who had a testy relationsh­ip with the president that often left them publicly at odds. Tillerson also clashed with the profession­al staff of the department, who felt marginaliz­ed under his leadership. The 74,000 employees, two-thirds of them working abroad, will be looking for early cues that Pompeo appreciate­s their expertise and wants to return the State Department to its traditiona­l place at the center of U.S. foreign policy.

He will have his hands full filling crucial jobs. Eight of the nine senior staff positions at State are unfilled, as are 60 ambassador­ships and 10 of the 22 assistant secretary positions.

The department is the only agency in the Trump administra­tion that still has a hiring freeze in place. Pompeo has vowed to address staffing shortages immediatel­y, and end the freeze. Last week, he also indicated to members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that he would be open to more funding than the 30 percent budget cut the White House has proposed for the department.

Some will be looking for a return to daily press briefings, which went on hiatus under Tillerson before returning to a pace of twice weekly. State Department employees follow the briefings religiousl­y for statements of policy to guide them.

But his earliest tests will take place in the first few weeks of his tenure, on the world stage.

Pompeo’s confirmati­on was hustled to Thursday to ensure he would be able to attend today’s conference of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels as the newly-confirmed secretary of state.

By May 12, Pompeo will have to advise Trump on whether to extend waivers to sanctions suspended under the 2015 Iran deal, a momentous decision that could lead to the United States reneging on its commitment­s and effectivel­y withdrawin­g from the pact.

The new U.S. embassy in Jerusalem is slated to open May 14. The move, unilateral­ly decided by the administra­tion, was overwhelmi­ngly condemned in the United Nations. It will fall to Pompeo to make plans to build a bigger embassy so all the employees in Tel Aviv can work there.

And Pompeo is expected to take a lead role in the run-up to a planned early June summit between Trump and North Korea’s Kim, a meeting that could pave the path for talks leading to Pyongyang abandoning its nuclear weapons.

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 ?? ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG ?? Mike Pompeo was confirmed Thursday by the Senate as secretary of state. He was serving as director of the CIA. The department is beset by a hiring freeze and is short of senior staff.
ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG Mike Pompeo was confirmed Thursday by the Senate as secretary of state. He was serving as director of the CIA. The department is beset by a hiring freeze and is short of senior staff.

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