Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pompeo’s promise

He is bound to rebuild the diplomatic corps

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Given the importance in the conduct of foreign relations of presenting a consistent position to countries around the world, America will be better off if Mike Pompeo is confirmed as secretary of state.

Mr. Pompeo’s hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Thursday went relatively smoothly, although he was questioned somewhat vigorously by some senators on some points and the committee’s recommenda­tion on his confirmati­on is far from certain.

Most important was the fact that Mr. Pompeo pledged to oil the machinery and replace missing parts of the Department of State. He seems dedicated to putting it once again in the business of formulatin­g America’s foreign policy at home and conducting it with America’s friends and enemies overseas. The recently departed Rex Tillerson, President Donald Trump’s fired secretary of state, was a product of the corporate world. He had taken a closed-box approach to managing the institutio­n. Further, he permitted intolerabl­e vacancies in leadership positions and had agreed to crippling cuts in its budget.

There are three good reasons to believe that Mr. Pompeo will keep his word when he says he will put the Department of State back on the rails. The first is what he did as CIA director: By most reports, he honored the profession­als, showing respect and trying to get their best work from them. The second reason is that even prior to his confirmati­on hearing Thursday, Mr. Pompeo had begun consultati­ons with previous secretarie­s of state, including Hillary Clinton, and other senior former diplomats, on policy and how to run the place to best effect. These are management principles that reflect Mr. Pompeo’s life experience as the owner of a business and a Kansas congressma­n — getting out and pressing the flesh is the starting point. Mr. Pompeo also brings some smarts to the job: He graduated first in his class from West Point and picked up a Harvard law degree after serving in the Army.

The third reason to expect better performanc­e from Mr. Pompeo than from Mr. Tillerson is that he has developed, through his CIA briefing sessions with Mr. Trump, the trust of the president. Americans can hope that this relationsh­ip will preclude the president from undercutti­ng the foreign policy positions that Mr. Pompeo will be presenting through formal and informal White House communicat­ions. Nothing is more destructiv­e to a secretary of state’s credibilit­y than to have the White House contradict a position he is advocating, particular­ly when the secretary is overseas.

Renewed strength and capacity at the Department of State and improved understand­ing with the president will not, of course, diminish the magnitude of the issues that Mr. Pompeo will face, should he be confirmed by the Senate. These include the upcoming Trump-Kim Jong Un meeting, what if anything to do about Syria, the future of the Iran agreement, Israel-Palestine and even a possible meeting between Mr. Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The immediacy of these issues underlines the importance of who presides at the Department of State.

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