Arab Times

Ex-Boeing Shanahan Trump Defense temp

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WASHINGTON, Dec 24, (Agencies): The sooner-thanexpect­ed departure of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis shifts the focus to President Donald Trump’s appointmen­t of an acting Pentagon chief and plans for a permanent replacemen­t.

It also signals an acrimoniou­s end to a tense relationsh­ip between Trump and Mattis that had eroded in recent months. A fracture developed last week over Trump’s decision to withdraw US troops from Syria and worsened after Mattis’ public disagreeme­nt with Trump, aired in his resignatio­n letter.

Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan will take over as acting secretary on Jan 1, Trump announced in a tweet Sunday. He had worked for more than three decades at Boeing Co and was a senior vice-president when he became Pentagon deputy in July 2017.

In the new year Trump wants to focus on streamlini­ng purchases at the Pentagon, an issue on which Shanahan has already been working, a White House official said. The official asked not to be identified publicly discussing personnel matters.

US officials said they didn’t know if Shanahan would be Trump’s nominee to replace Mattis. During a lunch with conservati­ve lawmakers Saturday at the White House, Trump discussed his options. They were “not all military,” said Sen Lindsey Graham, R-SC, who was among those attending.

Shanahan’s biography on the Pentagon’s website does not list military experience for the longtime Boeing executive. He earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineerin­g from the University of Washington, then a master’s degree in mechanical engineerin­g as well as an MBA from the Sloan School of Management at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

In addition to work in Boeing’s commercial airplanes programs, Shanahan was vicepresid­ent and general manager of Boeing Missile Defense Systems and of Boeing Rotorcraft Systems. In a March 2016 report, the Puget Sound Business Journal called Shanahan a Boeing “fix-it” man who was central to getting the 787 Dreamliner on track after production problems in the program’s early years.

An acting defense secretary is highly unusual. Historical­ly when a secretary has resigned, he has stayed on until a successor is confirmed. For example, when Chuck Hagel was told to resign in November 2014, he stayed in office until Ash Carter was confirmed the following February.

Mattis, a retired Marine Corps general, had been expected to retain his position as Pentagon chief through February. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, not the president, notified Mattis of Trump’s

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