The National - News

New secretary of state ticks all the right boxes for Trump,

- ROB CRILLY Profile

Mike Pompeo has everything Donald Trump wants in a senior appointmen­t – a hawkish demeanour, a history of doggedly pursuing Hillary Clinton and, above all, a military uniform.

That makes him a winner in Trump world and a more natural fit in his administra­tion than Rex Tillerson, a Texas oilman many considered an odd choice as US Secretary of State.

Mr Tillerson’s steady and independen­t approach put him at odds with the president on crucial issues from Qatar to Russia, and he had long seemed to be on borrowed time.

Mr Pompeo has quietly got on with the job in his role as director of the CIA, never notably clashing with Mr Trump.

When he has spoken out he has denounced efforts to rein in some of the most controvers­ial counter-terrorism programmes introduced after 9/11 and has criticised Iran’s sprawling role in the Middle East.

Like Mr Tillerson, however, Mr Pompeo has said America should stand with allies such as Britain and France who want to keep the nuclear deal reached with Tehran in 2015.

But in his new secretary of state, the president also has an ally playing down the effects of Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

“It is true,” that Russia interfered in the vote that took Mr Trump to the White House, he said at the Aspen security conference last year, “and the one before that, and the one before that”.

The remarks chimed with the president’s view that there was nothing untoward last time.

Mr Pompeo’s career bears all the firsts and bests that Mr Trump appreciate­s.

He graduated top of his class from the US military academy at West Point in 1986, before taking a degree from Harvard.

A stint in private industry, setting up an aerospace and security company, was followed by election to Congress in 2010 as part of the Tea Party surge, and he served on the House intelligen­ce committee.

Mr Pompeo was accused of Islamophob­ia after the 2013 Boston marathon bombing, when he took to the House floor to suggest that Muslim leaders were failing in their duty to discourage terrorism.

“Instead of responding, silence has made these Islamic leaders across America potentiall­y complicit in these acts and, more importantl­y, in those that may well follow,” he said.

Mr Pompeo, 54, became an ardent critic of Mrs Clinton, the former secretary of state, when he joined the committee investigat­ing the 2012 attack on US diplomats and personnel in Benghazi in Libya.

Asked why the inquiry had taken longer than the Watergate investigat­ion, which prompted the resignatio­n of president Richard Nixon in 1974, he had a simple response.

“This is worse, in some ways,” he told NBC.

It was a line later echoed Mr Trump, who announced him as head of the CIA soon after winning the election in November 2016.

Mr Pompeo’s appointmen­t worried many career officers dismayed that such a partisan figure would lead an organisati­on that was supposed to rise above politics.

He has shown a particular­ly hawkish line on Iran, describing it recently as a “thuggish police state”, and expressed frequent disdain for the deal that limited Tehran’s nuclear programme, without joining Mr Trump in saying the agreement should be abandoned.

In the Middle East, Mr Pompeo is known to have close relationsh­ips with Israeli intelligen­ce agencies.

But he also developed links with the Palestinia­n Authority and was the first senior official from Mr Trump’s team to meet Mahmoud Abbas in February last year.

 ?? Reuters ?? New US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is hawkish, outspoken and has a military background
Reuters New US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is hawkish, outspoken and has a military background

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