USA TODAY International Edition

Pompeo ‘ on shifting sand’ as role unfolds

Credibilit­y has eroded, former diplomats say

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – It was Sept. 22 when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo fielded a straightfo­rward question about just- emerging reports that President Donald Trump had sought to pressure Ukraine’s president to open two investigat­ions motivated by domestic politics: “What do you know about those conversati­ons?”

Pompeo offered an evasive answer, giving the impression that he was unfamiliar with the details of Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky. That phone call triggered a whistleblo­wer complaint alleging that Trump had solicited foreign interferen­ce in the 2020 election.

“So you just gave me a report about a, I see, whistleblo­wer complaint, none, none of which I’ve seen,” Pompeo told ABC News on that Sunday morning.

It has now become clear that Pompeo was, in fact, intimately familiar with the campaign by Trump and his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to get Zelensky to say publicly that Ukraine would investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden and would also probe a debunked conspiracy theory that Ukraine, not Russia, interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Critics say Pompeo’s credibilit­y has collapsed amid revelation­s that the State Department chief enabled Giuliani to run a shadow foreign policy operation that undermined Ukraine, a vital U. S. ally under attack from Russia. The scandal has left America’s top diplomat weakened in Washington and on the world stage, former diplomats say.

“So far, the choices that the

secretary of state appears to have made have alienated him from his team, diminishin­g his ability to carry out our foreign policy,” said Lee Feinstein, a former U. S. ambassador to Poland and longtime State Department official. Every secretary of State faces a delicate balancing act of trying to keep the president’s confidence while giving him blunt advice and navigating complex geopolitic­al relationsh­ips, Feinstein and others say.

But Pompeo is “on shifting sand” as he tries to defend Trump’s actions amid a revolt from career State Department diplomats, said Cameron Hume, a 40- year veteran of the foreign service and former ambassador to Algeria, South Africa and Indonesia, among other posts.

The State Department did not respond to detailed questions for this story. James Jay Carafano, a foreign policy expert at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation, dismissed the House Democrats’ impeachmen­t inquiry as partisan and said Pompeo handled the situation appropriat­ely.

“There’s no evidence that he did anything wrong,” Carafano said.

Pompeo has shrugged off questions about his own actions and dismissed the inquiry as “Washington noise.”

But that “noise” has pulled back the curtain on what Pompeo knew about the Ukraine pressure campaign and how he responded.

On Aug. 29, about a month before the Ukraine allegation­s burst into public view, Pompeo received an urgent cable from his top U. S. diplomat in Ukraine, Bill Taylor, raising alarm bells about the Trump- Giuliani pressure campaign. In that classified missive, Taylor said he was specifically concerned that the Trump administra­tion was withholdin­g vital U. S. military aid, which Ukraine needed to counter Russian attacks, as leverage to force Zelensky to accede to Trump and Giuliani’s demands.

“I told the secretary that I could not and would not defend such a policy,” Taylor told lawmakers on Wednesday, during the House Democrats’ first public impeachmen­t hearing.

Taylor said he sent that Aug. 29 cable on the advice of John Bolton, then Trump’s national security adviser, who

“I told the secretary that I could not and would not defend such a policy.” Ambassador Bill Taylor On the possible pressure campaign to withhold military aid to Ukraine

also told him to write it in the first person, because that would be sure to catch Pompeo’s attention. Most such missives are written in the third person.

“There are not many first- person cables coming, so it gets attention when it comes in from the ambassador saying: ‘ I am concerned,’ ” Taylor recounted during his closed- door testimony in the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Taylor told lawmakers that he never received a response from Pompeo to that message.

Gordon Sondland, the ambassador to the European Union, was a central player in carrying out Trump and Giuliani’s efforts to pressure Ukraine – communicat­ing their demands to Ukrainian officials and other U. S. diplomats.

“I understand that all of my actions involving Ukraine had the blessing of Secretary Pompeo,” he told lawmakers last month, according to a transcript of his testimony. When he raised Giuliani’s involvemen­t in the Ukraine matter, “Pompeo rolled his eyes and said: ‘ Yes, it’s something we have to deal with,’ ” Sondland recalled.

Pompeo’s response seems to stand in stark contrast with that of Bolton, who warned his deputies to steer clear of Giuliani and called him a “hand grenade that is going to blow everybody up,” according to testimony from Fiona Hill, who served under Bolton as the National Security Council’s senior director for Europe and Russia.

“Ambassador Bolton had said repeatedly that nobody should be meeting with Giuliani,” Hill told lawmakers during her testimony.

But Pompeo helped carry out one of Giuliani’s key demands: the removal of Marie Yovanovitc­h, the former U. S. ambassador to Ukraine. Giuliani alleged she was insufficiently loyal to the president, and he targeted her with “a campaign of lies,” according to George Kent, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian affairs.

Kent and other top State Department officials felt Yovanovitc­h had been mistreated, and they pressed Pompeo to release a public statement of support for Yovanovitc­h. P. Michael McKinley, who was a senior adviser to Pompeo until he resigned last month, said he asked Pompeo about issuing such a statement three times, but Pompeo did not respond.

“It shouldn’t be difficult to put out a short statement that’s not political, stating clearly that we respect the profession­alism, the tenure of Ambassador Yovanovitc­h in the Ukraine,” McKinley told lawmakers in describing his request to Pompeo.

Pompeo has not said why he didn’t come to the ambassador’s defense.

Pompeo has repeatedly argued that Trump’s policy toward Ukraine strengthen­ed the country and that the administra­tion was focused on helping Ukraine root out rampant corruption. “We have robustly helped the Ukrainian people, and we collective­ly at the State Department have been focused like a laser on” helping Ukraine become a pro- Western democracy, he said in an interview Nov. 4 with a Kansas City talk radio show.

Pompeo and others have emphasized that under Trump, the United States began providing lethal weapons to Ukraine, a more aggressive form of support than the Obama administra­tion had provided.

“They chose to provide blankets,” Pompeo said in another recent interview, referring to the Obama administra­tion’s Ukraine policy. “We gave them real weapons, where they could fight against the Russians. I am proud of what the administra­tion did with its Ukraine policy.”

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/ EPA- EFE ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has shrugged off the inquiry as “Washington noise.”
JIM LO SCALZO/ EPA- EFE Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has shrugged off the inquiry as “Washington noise.”
 ?? JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY ?? Bill Taylor, the top American diplomat in Ukraine, says he raised alarm bells with Pompeo about Trump’s actions.
JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY Bill Taylor, the top American diplomat in Ukraine, says he raised alarm bells with Pompeo about Trump’s actions.

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