The Columbus Dispatch

Pompeo vows to energize US diplomacy, restore ‘swagger’

- By Josh Lederman

WASHINGTON — He didn’t mention Rex Tillerson by name, but the contrast was clear as new Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived at the State Department on Tuesday vowing to reinvigora­te American diplomacy and help the United States get “back our swagger.”

Pompeo was greeted with cheers and applause as he entered the marbled lobby of the Harry S. Truman Building for the first time as America’s top diplomat. He addressed a diplomatic corps left deeply dispirited by a tumultuous year under Tillerson, President Donald Trump’s first secretary of state. Pompeo described his mission as leading diplomats to execute Trump’s foreign policy “with incredible vigor and incredible energy.”

“The United States diplomatic corps needs to be in every corner, every stretch of the world, executing missions on behalf of this country,” Pompeo said. “It is my humble, noble undertakin­g to help you achieve that.”

He said he would spend “as little time” as possible cloistered in the secretary’s seventh-floor suite of offices, preferring to “get out” and interact directly with diplomats around the world, including humanitari­an workers at the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

It was a subtle attempt to differenti­ate himself from Tillerson, who was infamous for surroundin­g himself with just a few close aides and eschewing the input of career diplomats, rank-and-file staffers and even U.S. lawmakers.

And in another sign that Pompeo was pursuing a different approach than his predecesso­r, on his first day in the office he joined Twitter, a medium that Tillerson did not use. From the handle @SecPompeo, he tweeted his gratitude to Trump for naming him to the job.

“So many matters of global importance demand our focus,” Pompeo wrote in his inaugural tweet from the account. “I’m committed to putting the interests of the American people first and look forward to serving with the world’s finest diplomatic corps.”

Pompeo was confirmed by the Senate last week and left immediatel­y on his first foreign trip, visiting Belgium, Saudi Arabia, Israel and Jordan. He returned late Monday.

Trump planned to come to the State Department on Wednesday for a formal swearing-in ceremony for Pompeo, a former Republican congressma­n from Kansas who ran the CIA under Trump until being named as Tillerson’s replacemen­t.

Pompeo did not offer any details about what foreign policy issues would consume his focus in his first months, but a long list of pressing matters awaits him, including the president’s upcoming decision on whether to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal. Pompeo is also playing a leading role in Trump’s diplomacy with North Korea, and he secretly traveled to Pyongyang last month and met with Kim Jong Un ahead of Trump’s planned summit with the North Korean leader.

In his brief speech to the State Department’s workforce, Pompeo emphasized the need for an active U.S. presence beyond its borders — striking a somewhat different tone than the president, who has advocated putting “America first.” Pompeo noted that he described in his Senate confirmati­on hearing how the United States “is so exceptiona­l and so incredibly blessed.”

“The facts that derive from that is it also creates a responsibi­lity, a duty for America all across the world,” Pompeo said. “I know for certain that America can’t execute that duty, can’t achieve its objectives absent you all.”

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