Call & Times

Tone-deaf Tillerson isn’t doing his job

- Jennifer Rubin

We have heard the excuses over and over on Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's behalf. He's new at this. He's getting his feet wet. He's not used to press scrutiny. Frankly, neither he nor his defenders are helping his cause at this point.

The latest was his declaratio­n that "I didn't want this job. I didn't seek this job." He made the remark to Erin McPike, the sole journalist allowed to accompany him on his flight to Asia. "My wife told me I'm supposed to do this." He added, according to the report, "I was supposed to retire in March, this month. I was going to go to the ranch to be with my grandkids." Perhaps he intended this as a humble brag, but the tone came across as self-pitying and crabby. (In effect, he seems to be telling us: How dare you criticize me when I didn't have to serve you people.)

This came after his assertion that "I am not a big press media access person. I personally don't need it." Well, someone should break it to him that this is not about him; it's about the accountabi­lity we expect of high-ranking officials in a democracy. Right Turn readers would never accuse me of fondness for the Obama State Department, but I could not agree more with the remarks of one of its members quoted by McPike:

"We didn't see public diplomacy and giving access to reporters as a disadvanta­ge. We saw them as part of the responsibi­lity you have in a democracy to keep the public informed about decisions being made in their name. We saw them as opportunit­ies to explain and advance our agenda. And we saw them as an important example to set for parts of the world where such transparen­cy is unfortunat­ely rare. In other words, we didn't see these things as weaknesses, but as a source of strength."

Tillerson's perpetual tonedeafne­ss would be problemati­c for any Cabinet official. For the country's chief diplomat, it is tragic. Much of diplomacy is not just what one says and does but how one says and does it. In order for the secretary of state to confront what is arguably our greatest challenge – Russia's threat to our and other liberal (small "l") democracie­s – he must, first, grasp the nature of the threat and then, second, understand his role in combating it.

Tillerson might consider the remarks of the ranking Democrat on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who spoke at the Brookings Institutio­n on Tuesday. In a column adapted from those remarks, Schiff cautioned: "The Russian attack on our democracy last year was unpreceden­ted in that it was directed obviously at us and in that it succeeded. But in fact, the Russian government and the Soviets before them have long been working to destabiliz­e their European neighbors-perfecting the techniques that were deployed so effectivel­y here last year." Pointing to Russian efforts to cultivate far-right parties in Europe and meddle in our allies' elections, he warned, "The objective is simple: to arrest and reverse European integratio­n, to push NATO back from Russia's borders, and, to the extent possible, re-create Soviet-era influence in Moscow's Near Abroad." Schiff's recommenda­tion is the anti-Tillerson approach:

"Ensuring that the assault by Russia and others on democracy does not succeed must now take its place among the first rank of foreign policy issues-a docket that is already overwhelmi­ng and not likely to get any more manageable in the foreseeabl­e future.

"The internatio­nal community of democracie­s, of which the United States is a part, has a duty to act in concert to protect the electoral process in France and Germany, and in other countries where Russia or other antidemocr­atic regimes are working to subvert elections and distort internal dialogue.

"As the birthplace of modern democracy and its great champion, the United States must lead this effort. Yet the sense among allies and others is that this is a role that our new President neither desires, nor considers a priority for the United States."

In short, active and public defense of democratic values; walking the walk and not simply talking about the virtues of open, democratic institutio­ns; prioritizi­ng relationsh­ips with democratic allies; and vocal support for human rights are critical. Schiff was right to knock Tillerson because he "did not even bother to show up for this year's release of the report on human rights, a sharp break with the practice of previous secretarie­s."

Foreign policy guru Thomas Wright remarks via email, "Russia and China are delighted that Secretary Tillerson is not pushing them on human rights and democracy. They're delighted because they know it matters. And even better, they got it without giving anything up." He adds, "The job of secretary of state is not just about striking narrow deals with foreign government­s; it is about representi­ng and defending a particular idea of internatio­nal order. That requires the secretary to engage people, not just government­s. It means the secretary needs to talk about universal values and remind us of our history."

Perhaps there is some recognitio­n on Tillerson's part that things have gone offcourse. The Wall Street Journal reports: "U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, facing complaints over his unusual plan to skip a formal meeting of North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on foreign ministers in April, moved to reassure allies by suggesting alternativ­e dates for the meeting, the State Department said. ... After complaints from diplomats, the State Department said on Tuesday it had offered dates to NATO that would allow Mr. Tillerson to attend the meeting of foreign ministers, which is currently planned for April 56."

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