Khaleej Times

US diplomacy back on track as Pompeo makes ME debut

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Burkinabe authoritie­s have arrested 100 people and seized explosives in operations in regions near the Malian border, the chief of army staff said. “From April 19 to 27 the armed forces carried out operations leading to the arrest of 100 suspects as well as the neutralisa­tion of explosives.” — riyadh — Washington’s newly appointed secretary of state landed in Riyadh on Saturday on a tour of America’s key Middle East allies, after vowing to bring some “swagger” back to US diplomacy.

After attending Nato talks in Brussels, Mike Pompeo embarked on a three-day trip to Saudi Arabia, Israel and Jordan to update friends on President Donald Trump’s plans for the Iran nuclear deal.

Pompeo was met on the tarmac in Riyadh by a sizeable Saudi Arabian delegation, including the kingdom’s foreign minister, Adel Al Jubeir, and US ambassador Khalid bin Salman — brother of the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Trump is widely expected to pull the United States out of the Iran accord next month, re-imposing sanctions against Tehran’s nuclear program. Pompeo insists the president has not yet made the decision.

The former CIA chief, who was sworn in as Trump’s top diplomat on Thursday and set off within two hours for Brussels, will consult with Middle East allies ahead of the announceme­nt.

But he also has a second more personal mission, to show foreign capitals and his own colleagues that US diplomacy is back on track after the troubled reign of his sacked predecesso­r Rex Tillerson.

Trump’s first secretary of state, a former oil executive, failed to fill senior positions, embarked on unpopular bureaucrat­ic reforms and had conspicuou­sly little chemistry with the president.

Pompeo — a former army officer, businessma­n and conservati­ve congressma­n — wanted to set off on the road immediatel­y on being sworn in, in order to reach out to Nato and Middle East allies.

But he has promised to address State Department staff in Washington on his return on Tuesday, and was full of praise for the staff who scrambled to put together his first foreign itinerary. “I just met with a great group of State Department officers who work here at the mission. They may have been demoralise­d, but they seemed in good spirits,” he said Friday, at Nato headquarte­rs.

“They are hopeful that the State Department will get its swagger back, that we will be out doing the things that they came onboard at the State Department to do,” he promised.

“To be profession­al, to deliver diplomacy — American diplomacy — around the world, that’s my mission set, to build that esprit and get the team on the field so that we can effectuate American diplomacy.”

The former Kansas politician is seen as an anti-Iran hawk with hardline views about projecting US military might, and his socially conservati­ve opinions might be out of place at the State Department.

During his short confirmati­on process critics pointed to past statements critical of Islam and of same-sex marriage, which they said made him an unsuitable champion of American ideals abroad.

But there is also optimism, palpable among the officials around him on the trip, that US diplomacy at last has a chief who can speak for the president and will focus on the department’s core missions.

In Saudi Arabia on Saturday, Pompeo is due to hold talks with Jubeir in Riyadh, before having dinner with Prince Mohammed, who has strengthen­ed his ties to Washington since being appointed in June.

Trump wants Riyadh to do more and spend more to support the US-led operation in Syria to defeat the Daesh group and allow American forces to come home more quickly.

After Saudi Arabia, Pompeo is due to fly on to Israel for talks with staunch US ally Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then to Jordan, a friend with a long border with war-torn Syria. —

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