The Oklahoman

Bannon out, Perry in at National Security Council

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Rick Perry was named to the National Security Council in a memo released on Wednesday, putting the secretary of energy and longtime Texas governor into Donald Trump’s inner circle for national security decisions.

The decision was part of a larger reshufflin­g of the NSC announced in a notice published in the federal register that revamped the Principals Committee for the group. The Principals Committee is a body that considers policy solutions to national security issues, and the president has the power to change it at will.

Gone from the list was chief Trump political strategist Steve Bannon, the former chairman of Breitbart News, whose appointmen­t to the NSC was controvers­ial when it was announced Jan. 28. Critics of Bannon’s role were worried he would politicize a body traditiona­lly viewed as a candid and nonpartisa­n source of national security informatio­n to the president.

In addition to Perry, the new NSC lineup includes the director of national intelligen­ce, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the director of the CIA and the ambassador to the United Nations. Those positions were conspicuou­sly absent from Trump’s original Jan. 28 order.

The changes were directed by Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, who was named Trump’s national security adviser in February after Michael Flynn was forced to resign for misleading Vice President Mike Pence about his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

Perry will now participat­e in high-level meetings to determine policy positions on key national security issues such as the recent chemical attacks in Syria and North Korea’s continued missile tests. Bannon still has the ability to sit in on meetings if invited.

“Steve Bannon’s removal from National Security Council is welcome news,” Republican Rep. Ileana RosLehtine­n of Florida said in a tweet after the decision was announced. Ros-Lehtinen was the first Republican in Congress to protest Bannon’s appointmen­t in January.

The Principals Committee was first establishe­d by President George H.W. Bush as a mechanism to organize the NSC. Each subsequent president has re-formed the committee to suit his needs, but Bannon’s appointmen­t was unpreceden­ted because his position in the White House did not require Senate approval. Some of Barack Obama’s policy advisers sat in on NSC meetings on a limited basis.

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