The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Tillerson: U.S. won’t insist nations adopt U.S. values, rights

- By Josh Lederman and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON >> Translatin­g “America First” into diplomatic policy, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Wednesday declared the United States would no longer condition its foreign relationsh­ips on countries adopting U.S. values like human rights. He spoke to a State Department eager for answers about changing priorities and a sweeping, impending overhaul.

Tillerson did not provide employees any details about the 2,300 jobs he plans to eliminate or how his proposed cut of roughly a quarter of the State Department budget might affect operations. Acknowledg­ing widespread unease about the forthcomin­g changes, he pledged that diplomats would emerge from the agency’s changes with “a much more satisfying, fulfilling career.”

Yet even as he left key administra­tive questions unanswered, Tillerson offered the most extensive presentati­on to date of what President Donald Trump’s “America First” mantra, adopted during the campaign and carried into the White House, means for America’s relations around the world. Over the last two decades, he said, Washington had “lost track” of whether postCold War alliances were still serving U.S. interests.

“These are really important alliances, but we’ve got to bring them back into balance,” Tillerson told a standing-room-only crowd in a State Department auditorium.

The former Exxon Mobil CEO distinguis­hed between U.S. “values” and “policies” that he said would drive his strategy. Policies can and must change, he said, while the challenge for diplomats is identifyin­g how to best represent U.S. values. For America’s national security, he added, policies won’t necessaril­y be contingent on values.

Rights groups and lawmakers from both parties have raised concerns about the Trump administra­tion deemphasiz­ing human rights, pointing to Trump’s warm interactio­ns with leaders of nations like the Philippine­s and Egypt, which have experience democratic backslidin­g in recent years. Tillerson’s remarks reinforced the notion that under Trump, the U.S. is willing to cut deals and cooperate closely with government­s failing to improve their rights records.

“In some circumstan­ces, if you condition our national security efforts on someone adopting our values, we probably can’t achieve our national security goals,” Tillerson said. “It really does create obstacles.”

Still, he insisted the U.S. would not “leave those values on the sidelines.”

Speaking without notes while pacing onstage, Tillerson took diplomats on a rhetorical tour of global hotspots, laying out the various elements of his diplomatic efforts to date:

—On Russia, Tillerson said “there’s almost no trust” between the world’s greatest nuclear powers, but that the administra­tion was trying to rebuild trust by looking at one issue at a time. First up is Syria, as Washington and Moscow see if they can get a ceasefire that can hold.

—On America’s two closest neighbors, he said Mexico and Canada are “ready to engage in a good-faith effort” to update their trade relationsh­ips with America, alluding to Trump’s insistence that the North America Free Trade Agreement be renegotiat­ed or canceled. He said ties with both aren’t “as rocky as it looks sometimes.”

—In Asia, he said the U.S. has prepared new sanctions on North Korea. He said the U.S. will take action against countries failing to fully implement existing United Nations penalties on doing business with Pyongyang. He said the administra­tion is taking a new look at relations with China and next month would hold the first session of a diplomatic and security dialogue with senior Chinese officials.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? State Department employees listen as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks, Wednesday at the State Department in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS State Department employees listen as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks, Wednesday at the State Department in Washington.

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