Houston Chronicle

Mattis shoots down reports about job status

Defense secretary dismisses talk that relations with Trump have soured recently

- By Helene Cooper

HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis played down suggestion­s that he was in danger of losing his job, as he made a case for leaving the U.S. military out of politics and asserting that the country’s sharp divisions have no place among the men and women who serve or the officers who lead them.

One day after President Donald Trump suggested Mattis is a Democrat — an accusation that in past Republican administra­tions wouldn’t mean much but in this one is close to treason — the retired four-star Marine general brandished bipartisan support for the U.S. military in Congress as a point of pride, not shame.

“When I was 18, I joined the Marine Corps, and in the U.S. military we are proudly apolitical,” Mattis told reporters aboard a 20hour flight to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, from Washington. “By that, I mean that in our duties, we were brought up to obey the elected commander in chief, whoever that is.”

He said that he had not registered as a Democrat or Republican and sought to dismiss reports his relationsh­ip with Trump has soured in recent months.

But those reports were only amplified Sunday when CBS broadcast a “60 Minutes” interview with Trump in which the president said Mattis “may leave” and “I think he’s sort of a Democrat, if you want to know the truth” — fighting words in a month when the president has accused Democrats of being an “angry, left-wing mob” bent on destroying the country.

‘I’m on his team’

Mattis, 68, said he had not watched the interview.

“I’m on his team,” he said. “We have never talked about me leaving.”

Two hours later, Mattis reappeared before reporters to say the president had just called him from Air Force One to reassure him that he was “100 percent” behind his defense secretary.

But administra­tion officials said Trump’s comments on “60 Minutes” reflected the president’s distaste for the bipartisan­ship and political neutrality Mattis constantly espouses. Trump doesn’t want that, aides say.

Rather, the president wants public loyalty and political support from his Cabinet. Mattis’ belief that the U.S. military should be above the political fray clashes with the president’s view the military and its generals belong to him, one administra­tion official said.

And even if Mattis is not a registered Democrat, he is viewed more warmly by Democrats than any other member of the Trump administra­tion. Mattis famously clashed with President Barack Obama over Iran policy when he was the head of U.S. Central Command, but he had a good relationsh­ip with Hillary Clinton and was viewed by many as a likely candidate for defense secretary had she won the 2016 presidenti­al election.

She didn’t, and he became defense secretary anyway, initially embraced by Trump, whom Mattis only met for the first time at his job interview during the transition. The two men got off to a great start, with Mattis talking Trump out of torturing detainees and advocating on behalf of U.S. alliances around the world.

But in recent months, strains have started to show, in part because, aides say, Trump has come to resent the narrative of Mattis as the only adult in the room in a chaotic White House.

‘We’re on our way’

What’s more, the decision by John R. Bolton, the national security adviser, to appoint Mira Ricardel as his deputy was viewed by many at the Pentagon as a direct affront to Mattis, who clashed with Ricardel when she served as a Pentagon transition official for the new administra­tion.

The president’s decision to publicly air difference­s with his defense secretary is bound to make Mattis’ job tougher, especially as he goes about the business — as he is doing this week — of trying to represent the Trump administra­tion on the world stage.

Mattis pointed to his trip to Vietnam, where he will seek to clear up some of the last remaining issues of the Vietnam War, and Singapore, where he will meet with Asian defense ministers, as proof he remains part of Trump’s national security team.

“You can see right here, we’re on our way, we just continue doing our job,” he said.

 ?? Kham / Associated Press ?? U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis meets with Ho Chi Minh City’s Communist Party chief Nguyen Thien Nhan on Tuesday in Vietnam. Mattis is in the country to clear up some of the last remaining issues of the Vietnam War.
Kham / Associated Press U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis meets with Ho Chi Minh City’s Communist Party chief Nguyen Thien Nhan on Tuesday in Vietnam. Mattis is in the country to clear up some of the last remaining issues of the Vietnam War.

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