Chattanooga Times Free Press

HOW POLITICAL ASSASSINS USE MEDIA TO OUST TILLERSON

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Fans of Robert Ludlum’s thrillers easily recognize his protagonis­ts as calm, canny, determined and worldly fellows quietly fighting sinister forces out to get rid of them in stealthy ways.

No one characteri­zes Rex Tillerson as thrilling. But he could otherwise fit that role. President-elect Donald Trump took the advice of Robert Gates and met with Tillerson, a career oil executive who spent years successful­ly running one of the globe’s larger corporatio­ns in Exxon Mobil.

Soon after their meeting, Trump named Tillerson the 69th official secretary of state in U. S. history, a long line of distinguis­hed names such as Thomas Jefferson, Daniel Webster, William Seward, George Marshall and Henry Kissinger.

Tillerson is one of the few secretarie­s with no formal diplomatic experience and soon may become one of that office’s shortest-serving which, by the way, is fourth in line of succession to the presidency.

The latest bold bid by nameless administra­tion sources to oust Tillerson by leak in collusion with cooperativ­e media members is a classic D.C. maneuver full of intrigue, ambition and malevolenc­e. It is also illustrati­ve of the fetid field of play that so many millions of Americans disdain and chose Trump to drain.

If several major media outlets are to be believed, at least two senior administra­tion officials say Chief of Staff John Kelly has drawn up a plan to replace Tillerson with CIA Director Mike Pompeo, who would be replaced by Sen. Tom Cotton by year’s end or soon after.

The Washington media lap up these anonymous leaks like starving kittens. Personnel contests, like shallow election horse race stories, are easy to do, appear to contain drama and inside info, and elevate the reporter to someone-in-the-know.

The fundamenta­l problem with these self-serving reports is the sources are unknown, so news consumers cannot judge their trustworth­iness and motivation­s. Which, of course, is the point of hiding their identities.

Some leaks, of course, are benignly promotiona­l. FDR cleverly invented this media manipulati­on. Recognizin­g newspapers’ need for news and the lack of it for Monday editions, he filled the void with his own Sunday night messages.

Today’s unidentifi­ed leak sources, however, could also be rogue troublemak­ers with a grudge against the secretary. They could be deep-state operatives seeking to stoke the Trump narrative of operationa­l chaos. Or as in a Ludlum novel, they could be authorized to do this by a shadowy higher-up with his own devious motivation­s, possibly to undermine and embarrass Tillerson so he resigns voluntaril­y.

In this time of competitiv­e 24/7 news cycles in Washington, it’s not all that hard for skilled political operatives to play hungry reporters, especially if the leaked info reflects negatively on Trump or his team.

One advantage is the hidden sources get the initial burst of coverage, often labeled “Exclusive,” and then a second wave of reinforcin­g coverage as other outlets play catch-up. Third and fourth news cycles likely feature stories of predictabl­e reactions from:

› The Target: Leaving, said Tillerson, “has never been a considerat­ion in my mind.”

› From Congress: “It’s been evident to me for some time, somebody is seeking to undermine his presence here,” said Bob Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

› And from Trump himself: “He’s not leaving and while we disagree on certain subjects, (I call the final shots) we work well together and America is highly respected again!”

Of course, Trump vowed firm support previously for Steve Bannon, Reince Priebus, Sean Spicer, Tom Price, Jim Comey and Mike Flynn, all of whom ended up departing soon after.

Dumping Tillerson now would not be smart. He’s on a weeklong European trip loyally delivering Trump advocacy to allies. And another firing would drown out the trumpets heralding Trump’s anticipate­d first legislativ­e victory of tax reform.

Year-end could be a good time to send the former oil executive back to his comfortabl­e Texas retirement. Fewer people pay attention to news over holidays. And if, as has occurred during all previous Tillerson firing boomlets, the secretary doesn’t depart then, no one can point fingers at the sources. They’re still anonymous.

 ??  ?? Andrew Malcolm
Andrew Malcolm

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