Dayton Daily News

Secretary of State Tillerson largely disappears in Cabinet

Trump appointee gives no interviews or press briefings.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

More than a month after he became America’s top diplomat, Rex Tillerson is like no other modern secretary of state: He’s largely invisible.

He has given no media interviews and has not held a single news conference. He has made two brief trips abroad — and was overshadow­ed both times by other Cabinet officials. His news releases are chiefly independen­ce day greetings to other nations.

The White House blocked him from appointing his choice for a deputy, so he still has none. Dozens of assistant secretary positions, the diplomats who head bureaus for specific regions and issues, also are unfilled.

Tillerson only occasional­ly meets President Donald Trump or his staff at the White House, and he has been conspicuou­sly absent from key meetings and conversati­ons with foreign leaders.

Foreign government­s that previously studied the neardaily State Department briefings for guidance on U.S. policy on matters large and small have little to go on. The last public briefing was on Jan. 19, the day before Trump took office; they are set to resume Monday, but on an irregular schedule.

The State Department is said to be facing deep budget cuts that could significan­tly curtail Tillerson’s ability to conduct the global diplomacy that is the backbone of U.S. foreign policy.

Opposition to deep cuts appears strong on both sides of the aisle. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said last week that sharp cuts to foreign aid and the State Department are unlikely to clear the Senate.

It’s not clear whether Tillerson’s under-the-radar style reflects his personalit­y, or if he is following a script from a White House that has taken control of foreign policy in the Middle East and with Mexico, and has stressed a robust military buildup over diplomacy and foreign aid.

Previous secretarie­s of state — John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Condoleezz­a Rice, Colin Powell, among others — were global celebritie­s. It might be argued how much power each ultimately wielded, but all were highly visible, frequently seen at his or her president’s side or in top-level encounters with world leaders.

Aaron David Miller, a former U.S. diplomat who served under six secretarie­s of state, described a marginaliz­ed Tillerson heading an “incredibly shrinking State Department.”

Miller said Tillerson appears to be competing for influence at the White House with Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, and Stephen Bannon, the president’s chief strategist.

“A way has to be found to empower Tillerson,” Miller said. “Without that, it takes five seconds for allies or adversarie­s to understand that the secretary of state does not have a whole lot of weight.”

Other foreign policy experts worry that the administra­tion has been so slow to fill scores of policy and operationa­l positions at the department, leaving acting appointees in charge.

“Some are very good, but it still means none have any authority,” said Henri Barkey, a former State Department official who now heads the Middle East program at the non-partisan Wilson Center think tank.

“There is no policy out there, and it is not clear Tillerson knows what he’s supposed to do,” he added.

In Washington, foreign diplomats and organizati­ons that routinely work with the State Department say it appears rudderless.

“There is no one under him,” said a Western diplomat who asked not to be identified because the diplomat’s embassy must deal with the State Department. Visiting delegation­s “have meetings but find everyone in listening mode.”

“Clearly no one below Tillerson is making any decisions, and people are trying to figure out what he wants,” said the representa­tive of an advocacy group who also asked not to be identified because the group is partially funded by the State Department.

At a news conference last week, White House spokesman Sean Spicer defended Tillerson’s relationsh­ip with Trump, saying the president regularly seeks and receives the diplomat’s input “in terms of foreign policy interactio­n.”

As a CEO of the global energy conglomera­te Exxon Mobil before he joined the administra­tion, Tillerson preferred flying to global capitals with a small entourage, swooping in to make deals. He answered only to a board of directors and shareholde­rs.

With the FBI and several congressio­nal committees investigat­ing whether the Trump team had improper contacts with Russian authoritie­s, perhaps it’s not surprising that Tillerson — who was close to Russian President Vladimir Putin several years ago — has kept his head down.

But his semi-disappeari­ng act at State after decades of high-profile, globe-trotting secretarie­s of State has far-reaching implicatio­ns for America’s position in the world.

Since taking office, Trump has alarmed allies by deriding the role of internatio­nal institutio­ns and trade pacts, challengin­g decades of policy with China and announcing a neo-isolationi­st “America First” policy toward the rest of the world.

“My job is not to represent the world,” Trump said last week in his first speech to Congress.

“My job is to represent the United States of America.” Tillerson felt compelled to weigh in the next day, issuing a statement that seemed aimed at salvaging his role as well as America’s use of soft power and military might, around the world.

 ?? AP ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson shakes hands with Indian Foreign Secretary Subrahmany­am Jaishankar at the State Department in Washington, D.C., on Friday.
AP Secretary of State Rex Tillerson shakes hands with Indian Foreign Secretary Subrahmany­am Jaishankar at the State Department in Washington, D.C., on Friday.

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