The Guardian (USA)

The last days of Pompeo: secretary of state lashes out as reign comes to an end

- Julian Borger in Washington

The finale of Mike Pompeo’s reign at the state department has been as controvers­ial and clamorous as the rest of his 32-month tenure, but it is unclear what traces will remain after he has gone.

The last days of Pompeo have been played out in a blizzard of self-congratula­tory tweets, at the rate of two dozen a day, as he seeks to write his own first draft of history.

The former Kansas congressma­n, with evident ambitions for a presidenti­al run in 2024, has accented his claims of success by frequent derogatory references to the previous administra­tion, portrayed as hapless appeasers. The political point-scoring and aggrandize­ment have made the use of the megaphone provided by a government Twitter account, with 3 million followers.

It is not the first time Pompeo has used government resources for personal ends. The state department inspector general was investigat­ing him for using state department staff to run private errands, like picking up dry cleaning and walking the dog, when Pompeo had him fired last May.

Some of the tweets have been factually incorrect, for example blaming Barack Obama for an arms control treaty that was signed by Ronald Reagan.

Other claims are contradict­ory, like his insistence the US has restored deterrence against Iran, alongside his allegation that Tehran is a greater threat than ever. On Tuesday, he called Iran “the new Afghanista­n”, alleging – without evidence – that it has become alQaida’s hub of operations.

While Iran’s economy has been successful­ly pummelled by sanctions, as Pompeo points out, its stockpile of low-enriched uranium is now more than 12 times greater than it was when Pompeo took up the job of US secretary of state in 2018.

“If the real economic duress US sanctions put on Tehran has increased or least failed to stop the very activities that policy was meant to reverse, it’s a matter of having made an impact without delivering a favourable outcome,” Naysan Rafati, senior Iran analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, said.

Similarly, Pompeo argues that Donald Trump’s summits with Kim Jong-un led to a lull in nuclear warhead and long-range missile testing. But he does not mention that Kim has declared an end to that moratorium, and is now set to have a substantia­lly bigger arsenal than when he began meeting Trump.

The portrait Pompeo has painted of Trump’s America has been in dramatic contrast to recent events. Two days after Congress came under an unpreceden­ted violent attack by a mob egged on by Trump, Pompeo blithely tweeted: “Being the greatest country on earth is not just about our incredible economy & our strong military; it’s about the values we project out into the world.”

He also boasted his state department team “did more than any other to build alliances that secured American interests” days before having to cancel his swan song trip to Europe because his counterpar­ts did not want to see him.

The Luxembourg foreign minister signalled he would be unavailabl­e to meet America’s top diplomat, and described Trump’s behaviour as “criminal”. The Belgian foreign minister, Sophie Wilmès, who Pompeo was also supposed to have met on the trip, made clear on Twitter that her government was counting on Joe Biden to restore US unity and stability.

“It is unpreceden­ted for an American secretary of state to be unwelcome at any time, especially at the end of their tenure, in the foreign ministries of our closest allies,” Brett Bruen, who was director of Global Engagement in the

Obama White House, said. “It just goes to show how far he has ostracised himself.”

In his would-be victory lap, Pompeo – known for being thin-skinned – has restricted his media interviews to admiring conservati­ve talkshow hosts and has not taken questions after his speeches.

At the headquarte­rs of the statefunde­d Voice of America (VOA) station on Monday, he berated its journalist­s for being insufficie­ntly patriotic, even “demeaning America”. He told them “to broadcast that this is the greatest nation the world has ever known”.

When a VOA journalist, Patsy Widakuswar­a, tried to ask him questions after his address, he walked away, ignoring her. Hours later Widakuswar­a was demoted from her position covering the White House, to other duties.

Michael Pack, the man installed by Trump and Pompeo at the head of the US Agency for Global Media, which oversees VOA and other federally funded broadcaste­rs, is seeking to entrench his position by making it harder for the incoming administra­tion to sack him, turning the agency’s statutory independen­ce to his advantage. But it is unclear Pack will succeed, having alienated both Democrats and Republican­s in Congress with his purges of journalist­ic and managerial staff.

“I don’t see the new administra­tion having great difficulty in helping him find the exit,” Bruen said.

There are other ways in which Pompeo has sought to impart a final, dramatic yank on the wheel of US foreign policy, with the intention of making it hard for the next administra­tion to change course.

Within his last 10 days, Pompeo has designated Houthi forces in Yemen and Cuba as a terrorist group and a state sponsor of terrorism respective­ly, although neither poses a direct threat to the US.

The Houthi designatio­n, which aid agencies warn might cause widespread deaths in Yemen by complicati­ng humanitari­an aid deliveries, was made without consulting lawmakers or their staff.

“You need to stop fucking lying to Congress,” one staffer told a state department official in a briefing call reported by Foreign Policy, and confirmed to the Guardian by a source familiar with the conversati­on.

“Like so many other similar briefings we’ve had from this administra­tion, they send these poor people out to defend these ridiculous policies, and they just can’t,” a senior Democratic congressio­nal staffer said.

While at the state department, Pompeo has expended most energy on attempting to drive nails into the coffin of the nuclear agreement major world powers made with Iran in 2015, and from which Trump withdrew in 2018.

That effort has so far been a failure. In response to waves of US sanctions Iran has stopped observing some of the agreed constraint­s on its nuclear activities, but has signalled it is ready to negotiate re-entry into the agreement with the new administra­tion.

The sanctions and terrorist designatio­ns are intended to impose political costs on the Biden team in trying to return to the pre-Trump status quo, based on the assumption that it will be unpopular to be seen to reward America’s adversarie­s, but it is far from clear whether it will work.

“What he’s doing is creating tough news days for the next administra­tion, but it’s manageable,” the senior Democratic staffer said, predicting the traps that Pompeo has been setting can be cleared away without expending too much political capital. “So much of the damage Trump and Pompeo have done has been through executive actions, so it can be reversed through executive action.”

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? US secretary of state Mike Pompeo is ending his reign with a blizzard of self-congratula­tory tweets, some of them incorrect.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images US secretary of state Mike Pompeo is ending his reign with a blizzard of self-congratula­tory tweets, some of them incorrect.

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