The Mercury News

Pompeo reverses Tillerson’s cautious approach, filling State Department with Trump-like swagger

- By Nick Wadhams

Secretary of State Michael Pompeo isn’t one to dawdle: On his most recent trip abroad he spent just three hours in Pakistan and 24 in India before heading home. Now he’s applying the same impatience to staffing up a State Department hobbled by vacancies and shattered morale.

As he rushes to fill key openings, the former CIA director is trying to rebrand his department with an image more to his liking — and more likely to appeal to his boss, President Donald Trump. Instead of overseeing a corps of cautious and cerebral diplomats, Pompeo boasts on social media that he’s leading the “Department of Swagger.”

Since his confirmati­on at the end of April, the administra­tion has put forward 57 nominees for ambassador­s and senior State Department posts, of whom 28 have been confirmed so far. Overall, 51 State Department nominees are pending in the Senate, according to the department, as Pompeo tries to reverse some of the cuts made under his predecesso­r, Rex Tillerson.

“Foreign Service officers seem to be breathing a sigh of relief that the building feels like it’s returning to some degree of normalcy,” said Dan Feldman, a former State Department special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan. “The feeling seems akin to PTSD, where recovery

“Foreign Service officers seem to be breathing a sigh of relief that the building feels like it’s returning to some degree of normalcy.” — Dan Feldman, a former State Department special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan

may have started and seems promising, but with the recognitio­n that it will take many years of intense focus and resources to rectify the harm already done by this administra­tion’s eviscerati­on of the building.”

One of Trump’s most trusted aides, Pompeo has the clout to get many of his choices for vacancies approved at the White House. He has led the on-and-off talks with North Korea and laid out the administra­tion’s confrontat­ional approach to Iran.

In an administra­tion riven by high turnover, Pompeo has worked to reverse the hollowing out that occurred at astonishin­g speed during Tillerson’s 13-month tenure. In some cases, Pompeo is moving so fast — he says he wants his “team on the field” — that his new hires don’t even have formal titles yet.

So it was with Zalmay Khalilzad, the former ambassador

to Iraq and Afghanista­n who joined Pompeo on the recent trip to Pakistan even though his security and financial vetting wasn’t yet complete. A reporter asked if Khalilzad, whom Pompeo wants to oversee Afghan reconcilia­tion efforts, was taking the long-standing post of special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan.

“I don’t know,” Pompeo said. “Actually, I want to say no.”

Not all the jobs are toptier positions in the diplomatic pecking order, but they are filling gaps that had been occupied by acting or deputy officials. Among the nomination­s for ambassador­ial jobs in recent months are posts in Benin, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Mozambique, Togo, Ecuador and Gambia.

Pompeo has made very public efforts to appeal to the diplomatic corps that Tillerson disdained, including by appointing career diplomats David Hale and Michael McKinley to senior jobs. McKinley, named a senior counselor, has been installed in the chief of staff’s office next to Pompeo’s.

But critics argue those are exceptions rather than the norm. The American Foreign Service Associatio­n said that as of Sept. 11, only one of the department’s 15 assistant secretarie­s had been drawn from the ranks of currently serving Foreign Service officers.

The talent field available to Pompeo is constraine­d because many Foreign Service officers with decades of experience left the department under Tillerson’s watch, which ended when Trump dismissed him in a tweet.

“You have very few people who have ever actually made foreign policy working with foreigners,” said Ronald Neumann, president of the American Academy of Diplomacy. “You have lots of people who have knowledge of foreign policy issues but no knowledge how to execute it.”

 ?? ANDREW HARRER — BLOOMBERG ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the briefing room at the State Department in Washington.
ANDREW HARRER — BLOOMBERG Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the briefing room at the State Department in Washington.

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