The Mercury News

Why Mike Pompeo is the worst secretary of state ever

- By Thomas L. Friedman Thomas L. Friedman is a New York Times columnist.

If you thought the Trump-Twitter-Fox noise distractio­n machine was extra loud in the past few weeks, it wasn’t only to distract from the nearly 100,000 Americans who’ve died from COVID-19, but also from the confirmati­on that on President Donald Trump’s watch our country suffered the first deadly terrorist attack on U.S. soil since 9/11 that was planned abroad.

You read that right. Last week, Attorney General William Barr and the FBI said that data from cellphones of a Saudi air force trainee who killed three U.S. sailors and wounded eight at a Navy air base in Pensacola, Florida, on Dec. 6 confirmed it was an act of foreign-planned “terrorism.”

The phone data “definitive­ly establishe­s” that the trainee, Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani, had “significan­t ties to al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula — not only before the attack, but before he even arrived in the United States” in August 2017. He had actually joined the Saudi military to carry out a “special operation.”

That Alshamrani was able to kill three sailors at an American base was a massive failure of U.S. and Saudi intelligen­ce. Who should be getting more scrutinize­d before they come train in the U.S. on an air base than Saudi pilots?

The Trump administra­tion clearly had no idea what was happening under its nose.

As The Washington Post noted: After the attack, investigat­ors found evidence that 17 fellow Saudi students “had shared Islamist militant or anti-American material on social media, and others had possessed or shared child pornograph­y. As a result, 21 cadets from Saudi Arabia were disenrolle­d from the training program and sent home.”

That sort of intelligen­ce failure is something you’d expect Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to be particular­ly upset about. After all, it was Pompeo, when he was in Congress, who spearheade­d the investigat­ions into thenSecret­ary of State Hillary Clinton’s supposed responsibi­lity for the death of four U.S. diplomats in a terrorist attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012.

You’ll recall Rep. Pompeo’s endless campaign to nail Clinton with Benghazi. The Guardian described the conclusion of the 800page House select committee investigat­ion on Benghazi, led by a Republican representa­tive,

Trey Gowdy, and issued in 2016 thus:

It “found no new evidence to conclude that Hillary Clinton, secretary of state at the time, was culpable in the deaths.” A few hours later, the Obama White House “noted tersely that this was the eighth congressio­nal committee to investigat­e the attacks and went on longer than the 9/11 Commission and the committees designated to look at Pearl Harbor, the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy, the Iran-Contra affair and Watergate.”

So, then-Congressma­n Pompeo led the utterly contrived campaign to blame Clinton for the Benghazi deaths — a charge that a Republican-led committee found to be without merit. But Pompeo’s crusade gained Trump’s attention, via Fox News, and Pompeo was named Trump’s CIA director. And now we learn that while Pompeo was CIA director, the first foreign-planned terrorist attack on U.S. soil since 9/11 was being organized here and abroad, and while he was secretary of state it was carried out.

Now that’s something worth investigat­ing. I don’t know much about Pompeo’s time as head of the CIA, except that he notoriousl­y spent long hours at the White House sucking up to Trump. But I do know he’s been the worst secretary of state in American history, without a single diplomatic achievemen­t.

Pompeo’s two most notable accomplish­ments as secretary of state are, metaphoric­ally speaking, shooting two of his senior State Department officials in the back.

One was the distinguis­hed U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitc­h, whom Pompeo removed on the orders of Trump and Trump’s nut-job lawyer Rudy Giuliani. The other was the department’s inspector general, Steve Linick, whom Pompeo got Trump to fire, reportedly because he was investigat­ing — wait for it now — Pompeo’s own efforts to evade a congressio­nal ban on arms sales to Saudi Arabia and for improperly asking a State Department employee to run errands for him and his wife.

With a president, a Senate majority and Fox News always at the ready to defend him, Pompeo couldn’t care less about any of this. He just smirks and marches on. But every American should care. The morale and effectiven­ess of our State Department — and our standing in the world — are both the worse for him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States