The Borneo Post

Exxon’s Tillerson will need to change course at state

-

NEW YORK: Rex Tillerson, who sealed big oil deals and developed close ties with foreign leaders around the globe as head of ExxonMobil, will have to firmly change course to serve as America’s top diplomat.

Tillerson, 64, has been chief executive of the world’s biggest publicly-traded oil company since 2006, and spent a career going where the hydrocarbo­ns are. That has often meant negotiatin­g with autocrats, and navigating in politicall­y unstable countries or those with poor human rights records.

Tillerson’s level of comfort with foreign leaders is a major source of his appeal to President-elect Donald Trump, but it is certain to draw scrutiny during his Senate confirmati­on hearing.

“I have a very close relationsh­ip with President Vladimir Putin,” Tillerson said in February at the University of Texas at Austin.

“I don’t agree with everything he is doing, but he understand­s that I’m a businessma­n. My company invested a lot of money in Russia very successful­ly.”

But Tillerson has criticised western sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Crimea, with support from the Obama administra­tion.

Asked in a year-end press conference Friday about having a secretary of state with close ties to Russia, President Barack Obama said there will be opportunit­ies to raise questions on Trump’s appointmen­ts in the confirmati­on process.

“There will be plenty of time for members of the Senate to go through the record of all of his appointees and determine whether or not they’re appropriat­e for the job,” Obama told reporters.

An engineer by training, Tillerson has represente­d ExxonMobil in a myriad of other politicall­ychallengi­ng countries like Angola, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Iraq, Libya, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

When abroad, Tillerson often employed the mantra “I am a businessma­n” to describe his mission. — AFP

 ??  ?? Workers walk during the morning rush hour in the Canary Wharf business district of London, Britain. Some of the biggest foreign investment and commercial banks operating in Britain paid an average tax rate of just six per cent on the billions of...
Workers walk during the morning rush hour in the Canary Wharf business district of London, Britain. Some of the biggest foreign investment and commercial banks operating in Britain paid an average tax rate of just six per cent on the billions of...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia