Trump receives envoys, but U.S. posts go unfilled
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump officially received four foreign ambassadors into the United States on Monday, a White House ceremony that also was a reminder that he has yet to send many U.S. ambassadors abroad — to dozens of key diplomatic posts.
Fourteen months into his administration, for example, the United States has no ambassador to South Korea as Trump prepares for a high-stakes meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Nor has the president even nominated ambassadors to several important allied nations in the Middle East, where tensions have recently flared, including Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The same goes for Egypt and Jordan, the only two Arab states that recognize Israel and which are vitally important to dealings with the Palestinians.
Also empty is the ambassadorship of Turkey, a NATO ally, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan nonetheless has become increasingly anti-American and is reaching out to Russia, as well as the job of envoy to the European Union.
Of a total of 188 foreign posts, 56 are vacant, including in 46 countries and 10 international organizations normally headed by an ambassador, according to the American Foreign Service Association, the organization that represents diplomats.
Of the 56 open positions, 17 have nominees awaiting Senate confirmation. That leaves the bulk of the traditionally much-desired jobs just waiting for Trump to make a decision.
The vacancy rate is roughly twice that under then-President Barack Obama at this point in his term, according to the association.
Some in the White House and elsewhere blame outgoing Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and his cost-cutting campaign for the dearth of diplomats. Tillerson’s defenders say he was following the tone and directives set by the White House.
In the end, many lawmakers saw the proposed reduction as too draconian and Congress actually approved a small increase in the department’s budget. Trump fired Tillerson on March 13.
Whatever the cause of the vacant ambassadorial residences, veteran diplomats say the voids cripple U.S. influence abroad at a time of heightened dangers in many parts of the world.
“There is simply no denying the warning signs that point to mounting threats to our institution — and to the global leadership that depends on us,” Barbara Stephenson, former ambassador to Panama and president of the foreign service association, said on the group’s website.
She said the State Department’s diplomatic ranks had been “depleted at a dizzying speed.”
Not only is Trump failing to fill vacancies, but also his administration has forced some ambassadors out and spurred others to leave by choice.
Stephenson’s earlier post in Panama is vacant now because the most recent occupant, John Feeley, abruptly quit this month, saying he could no longer represent the administration. Trump had “warped and betrayed” the United States’ “traditional core values,” Feeley said at the time.
The “current administration has little respect for those who have served the nation apolitically for decades,” he wrote in an op-ed piece published by The Washington Post on March 9.
The ambassador in Mexico, Roberta Jacobson, is also stepping down, effective May 5. No replacement has been nominated.
Filling the South Korea post in Seoul has been especially fraught. The Trump administration nominated academic Victor Cha, a pre-eminent expert on the region, and then dropped him after he criticized a proposal that Trump was floating to conduct a pre-emptive “bloody nose” military strike on North Korea.
State Department officials reject the idea that American foreign policy is suffering because of empty ambassadorships.