The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Where’s Rex? It’s the State Department’s time to step up

- By Robbie Gramer and Dan De Luce Courtesy of Foreign Policy

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion came out swinging at North Korea after its latest nuclear test. Trump threatened to cut off all trade with any country that traded with Pyongyang; U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley accused North Korea of “begging for war”; Secretary of Defense James Mattis appeared to up the ante, warning Kim Jon Un that his country risked “total annihilati­on.”

But there was one voice noticeably absent from this clamor: America’s top diplomat.

The State Department won’t say where Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was over the weekend. He called his counterpar­ts in the region and participat­ed remotely in National Security Council calls, as State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert confirmed, but didn’t give any remarks or even put out a statement on North Korea testing a nuclear weapon.

Instead, it was Trump’s envoy to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, who was out in front on North Korea, saying it was time “to exhaust all of our diplomatic means before it’s too late.”

And it’s not just on North Korean issues.

Haley is also making news on U.S. policy toward Iran. In a speech before the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute in Washington on Tuesday, she gave the most detailed account yet of how the administra­tion views the Iran nuclear agreement, arguing that there were grounds for the president to declare the deal was not in America’s interests.

By contrast, Tillerson had reportedly clashed with Trump this summer, because the president was unhappy that his secretary of state couldn’t provide a viable option for declaring Iran was failing to comply with the agreement, which must be certified every 90 days under U.S. law.

Haley’s high profile on pressing internatio­nal issues, from Iran to North Korea, raised fresh questions about the influence and political future of the secretary of state. Tillerson has been strangely absent from the public spotlight, even amid mounting tensions with North Korea, and Haley has stepped in to fill the void.

“It is oddly conspicuou­s that the secretary of state has not been saying anything publicly about the latest events,” said Michael Fuchs, former deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs in the Obama administra­tion.

With the world watching for Washington’s response to North Korea’s nuclear test, Defense Secretary James Mattis and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Joseph Dunford, spoke to reporters in front of the White House on Sunday, after taking part in a meeting of Trump’s national security team. But Tillerson was not in sight of the cameras.

Tillerson’s absence on the public front reinforces a perception among foreign partners and Trump’s critics that the administra­tion places a higher priority on military force than diplomacy, and is more inclined to heed the advice of current and retired generals, experts said. The administra­tion’s failure to fill an array of senior diplomatic posts, including the ambassador­ship to South Korea, has only underscore­d that perception.

Tillerson’s silence also risks rattling allies who remain confused by the administra­tion’s often chaotic policymaki­ng process and the president’s contradict­ory statements, experts said.

“The actual role of diplomacy in the North Korea situation thus far has been scant,” said Mira Rapp-Hooper of the Center for a New American Security. And Tillerson’s public silence sends “a signal that diplomacy is less important.”

A State Department spokesman, however, insisted Tillerson was hard at work behind the scenes.

“Since Sunday morning, the Secretary has spoken with Japanese Foreign Minister Kono, South Korean Foreign Minister Kang, Chinese State Counselor Yang, and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov,” the spokesman said. “He remains active and engaged on all matters pertaining to North Korea’s destabiliz­ing activities.”

Tillerson’s public reticence is also rekindling the simmering rumors of a “Rexit,” according to several current and former State Department officials. One U.S. government official told Foreign Policy that talk is circulatin­g of Haley stepping in to replace Tillerson.

“There are very strong rumors - started last week - that he is out and she will take over,” the official said.

Whispers about Tillerson’s possible exit started at the State Department over the summer amid reports of friction with the White House. Tillerson and his team rejected the rumors as false, but haven’t managed to stamp out persistent speculatio­n in Washington and among foreign diplomats about the secretary of state’s status.

The State Department spokesman declined to comment on the rumors that Tillerson could be leaving his post.

Unlike many of his predecesso­rs, Tillerson shies away from the spotlight. Interviews and public statements are few and far between, which has frustrated some diplomats who view a secretary’s public visibility and comments as a way of conveying U.S. foreign policy in the digital era.

His defenders at the State Department insist his quiet, behind-the-scenes approach is a perfect and calculated complement to Trump, whose approach is anything but.

But even out of the public spotlight, Tillerson’s sway in the White House has come under question. He has lost a number of internal debates, arguing unsuccessf­ully for the United States to remain in the Paris climate accord, and has clashed with Trump’s aides about who should be nominated to serve in key posts in the State Department.

Yet even given those conflicts, Tillerson’s public absence in recent days is striking.

“In a normal administra­tion, it would be standard protocol for the State Department or secretary of state to put out a statement, [and] then for administra­tion to deploy a very senior administra­tion official to do interviews and expand out [the policy],” Fuchs, the former State Department official, said. “That being said, this administra­tion is anything but normal.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens to a question during a news conference at the State Department in Washington.
AP FILE Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens to a question during a news conference at the State Department in Washington.

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