Trump weighs plan to oust Rex Tillerson
WASHINGTON — After months of clashes on policy and personality, President Donald Trump is considering ousting Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and replacing him with hard-nosed CIA Director Mike Pompeo following less than a year on the job, senior U.S. officials said Thursday as turmoil within Mr. Trump’s national security team burst into the open.
The White House plan, which Mr. Trump has not yet signed off on, would force a major
realignment early in his term, also creating a vacancy atop the CIA that officials said could be filled by Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas. The overhaul could produce a significant shift in both the tone and direction of the president’s foreign policy, removing it from the understated former oil man whose style has never fit well with Mr. Trump’s.
It is exceedingly rare for a secretary of state, America’s face on the global stage, to be fired or to serve for a year or less. Nor is it common for presidents to have such a significant Cabinet revamp so soon after taking office. Too much churn could fuel the perception of chaos in the Trump White House — perhaps one reason he has yet to pull the trigger.
Mr. Tillerson’s likely ouster, which was first reported by the New York Times, loomed awkwardly over an Oval Office meeting Thursday between Mr. Trump and the visiting Bahraini crown prince. Asked by a reporter whether he wanted Mr. Tillerson to stay on the job, Mr. Trump merely pointed out that Mr. Tillerson was in fact in the building.
“He’s here. Rex is here,” the president said.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Mr. Tillerson’s closest ally in the administration, simply brushed off the report. “There’s nothing to it,” he said.
But White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders didn’t deny it, suggesting that no move was imminent and that the president and Mr. Tillerson planned to “work together to close out what we’ve seen to be an incredible year.”
Friction between the president and the nation’s top diplomat has grown increasingly public through the year.
After a report last month that Mr. Tillerson had called the president a “moron,” Mr. Tillerson was forced to appear before cameras at the State Department to pledge fealty his boss. Soon after, Mr. Trump publicly challenged his secretary to an IQ match.
For Mr. Tillerson, who left his job as Exxon Mobil’s CEO, a premature departure from the Cabinet has seemed increasingly inevitable.
“There’s been a Tillerson death watch since the spring,” said Derek Chollet, a former State Department, Pentagon and National Security Council official in the Obama administration.
When Mr. Tillerson was tapped for the job late last year, many Trump critics expressed quiet relief that he’d picked a sober “adult” who could form a counterweight to the president’s brasher, impulsive approach, especially on critical matters of war and peace.
Yet divisions on key foreign policy issues emerged quickly, and Mr. Trump has repeatedly undermined Mr. Tillerson by voicing positions at odds with those the State Department was pushing.
When Mr. Tillerson in June called on Arab nations to ease their blockade on Qatar, Mr. Trump emerged in the Rose Garden hours later to lambaste Qatar for funding terrorism. Mr. Trump also deemed diplomacy with North Korea a waste of time, when Mr. Tillerson was pursuing just that. Mr. Tillerson’s advice to Mr. Trump to stay in the Paris climate deal and certify Iran’s compliance with the nuclear deal was similarly overruled.
Mr. Pompeo, in contrast, has formed a tight relationship with Mr. Trump that’s led to a role much broader than many past CIA chiefs. A former businessman and conservative Republican congressman from Kansas, Mr. Pompeo is at the White House nearly every day to deliver the daily intelligence briefing, a task often delegated to less senior officials. He sometimes stays longer to accompany Mr. Trump to other meetings. He shares the president’s hardline stance against Iran.
Mr. Cotton, a top contender to take over at CIA, has been one of Mr. Trump’s staunchestdefenders on foreign policy in Congress. Yet moving him would create a Senate vacancy just as Republicans need every vote possible. Under Arkansas law, if Mr. Cotton steps down before next July, the state’s Republican governor would appoint a replacement who would serve until the November 2018 election. If Mr. Cotton stays in the Senate, his current term doesn’tend until 2020.
Mr. Cotton’s office wouldn’t comment other than to say: “Sen. Cotton’s focus is on serving Arkansans in the Senate.”
Several administration officials said that Mr. Pompeo has said he’s open to the job.