Orlando Sentinel

Pompeo defends firing of State’s IG

He says dismissal should have been ‘some time ago’

- By Lara Jakes and Edward Wong

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday defended his recommenda­tion to fire the State Department’s inspector general, saying he should have done it sooner.

Pompeo, responding to questions from reporters at a State Department briefing, called it “patently false” that he asked President Donald Trump to dismiss the inspector general, Steve Linick, as retaliatio­n for the opening of inquiries into his potential misuse of government resources. Pompeo said he had been unaware of those investigat­ions when he made his recommenda­tion to the president.

Pompeo refused to give his reasons for wanting Linick removed, citing personnel privacy issues. But of his request that Linick be dismissed, Pompeo said he “frankly should have done it some time ago.”

He also called the allegation­s of his wrongdoing “all crazy stuff.”

“Let’s be clear: There are claims that this was for retaliatio­n for some investigat­ion that the inspector general’s office here was engaged in,” Pompeo said. “That’s patently false. I have no sense of what investigat­ions were taking place inside the inspector general’s office; couldn’t possibly have retaliated.”

Trump notified Congress of Linick’s dismissal Friday night, starting the clock on a 30-day review process by lawmakers. Trump had previously fired or demoted three other inspectors general earlier this spring, and the dismissal of Linick led Democrats in the House and Senate to begin an inquiry into the ouster.

Congressio­nal officials have said that Linick, who has served as the State Department inspector general since 2013, was examining several areas of policy and potential misuse of government resources that had raised concerns.

One investigat­ion by Linick’s office focused on whether Pompeo and his wife, Susan, had tasked State Department employees with menial household chores, including walking the family dog and picking up dry cleaning, a Democratic aide said.

A report published late Tuesday by NBC outlined details of another potential example of the couple’s misuse of government resources for personal gain: hosting taxpayer-funded dinners at the State Department for political donors and supporters as Pompeo eyes a future campaign for higher office.

A State Department spokespers­on has defended the dinners as an opportunit­y for the guests — nearly 500 invitees from the corporate, political and diplomatic communitie­s at about two dozen events since 2018 — to discuss foreign policy. But NBC’s review of the guest list, which the State Department has not publicly released, found that only 14% of the guests were diplomats or foreign officials.

Linick’s office was also investigat­ing at least one policy issue tied directly to Pompeo, whether the Trump administra­tion acted illegally last year in declaring an “emergency” to bypass a congressio­nal freeze on arms sales. Ending the freeze allowed U.S. companies, including Raytheon, to sell at least $8.1 billion of arms to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Lawmakers from both parties had put a hold on the sales in 2017 because of reports of mass civilian deaths in the Saudi-led air war in Yemen and because of a political rift among Persian Gulf nations.

Pompeo, who announced the “emergency” last year, was aware of the investigat­ion, which was nearing completion. He had declined to sit down for an interview with Linick’s investigat­ors and had provided written answers instead, which lawyers likely helped shape, according to three people with knowledge of the events.

During his Wednesday briefing, Pompeo said that he had responded in writing to one inspector general inquiry but did not specify the topic of the investigat­ion.

“I don’t know the scope. I don’t know the nature of that investigat­ion,” Pompeo said. “I did what was right. I don’t know if that investigat­ion is continuing. I don’t know if that investigat­ion has been closed out.”

In early March, investigat­ors told senior State Department officials of their preliminar­y findings in the Saudi inquiry, which is customary before reports are released.

Questions over the possible misuse of taxpayer funds by Pompeo, including on frequent trips aboard department aircraft to his adopted home state, Kansas, have dogged the secretary since he began his current job in April 2018.

In his previous position as CIA director, employees had asked questions about Susan Pompeo’s unusually active volunteer role at the agency’s headquarte­rs in Langley, Virginia, where she borrowed office space.

“I’ve seen the various stories that someone was walking my dog to sell arms to my dry cleaner,” Mike Pompeo said Wednesday. “It’s all just crazy. It’s all crazy stuff.”

Before joining the Trump administra­tion in 2017, Pompeo was a Republican congressma­n representi­ng a Kansas district, and he and his wife asked staff members in his Washington office to perform tasks that included picking up dry cleaning, making restaurant reservatio­ns and compiling Christmas card lists, according to people with knowledge of the events. However, the boundaries between personal and profession­al activities for members of Congress are often blurred, and some of the tasks straddled that line.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo calls allegation­s of wrongdoing “all crazy stuff ” during a news briefing Wednesday.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP Secretary of State Mike Pompeo calls allegation­s of wrongdoing “all crazy stuff ” during a news briefing Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States