White House Plans to Replace Tillerson by Pompeo
The White House has developed a plan to force out Secretary
of State Rex W. Tillerson, whose relationship with President Trump has
been strained, and replace him with Mike Pompeo, the C.I.A. director, perhaps
within the next several weeks, senior administration officials said on
Thursday.
Mr. Pompeo would be replaced at the C.I.A. by
Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas who has been a key ally of the
president on national security matters, according to the White House plan. Mr.
Cotton has signalled that he would accept the job if offered, said the
officials, who insisted on anonymity to discuss sensitive deliberations before
decisions are announced.
It was not immediately clear whether Mr. Trump has given
final approval to the plan, but he has been said to have soured on Mr.
Tillerson and in general is ready to make a change at the State Department. Mr.
Tillerson was at the White House on Thursday morning, although he was not
listed on the White House public schedule.
Asked by reporters on Thursday if he wanted Mr. Tillerson to
stay on the job, Mr. Trump said only, “He’s here. Rex is here.”
Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary,
later issued a statement. “There are no personnel announcements at this time,”
she said. “Secretary Tillerson continues to lead the State Department and the
entire cabinet is focused on completing this incredibly successful first year
of President Trump’s administration.”
John F. Kelly, the White House chief of staff, developed the
transition plan and has discussed it with other officials. Under his plan, the
shake-up of the national security team would happen around the end of the year
or shortly afterward. But for all of his public combativeness, Mr. Trump is
notoriously reluctant to fire people, and it was not known if Mr. Tillerson had
agreed to step down by then. Public disclosure of Mr. Kelly’s transition plan
may be meant as a signal to the secretary that it is time to go.
At the same time, there was some concern in the White House
about the appearance of a rush to the exits given that other senior officials
may also leave in the early part of the new year. White House officials were
debating whether it would be better to spread out any departures or just get
them over with all at once.
The ouster of Mr. Tillerson would end a turbulent reign at
the State Department for the former Exxon Mobil chief executive, who has been
largely marginalized over the last year. Mr. Trump and Mr. Tillerson have been
at odds over a host of major issues, including the Iran nuclear deal,
the confrontation with North Korea and a clash between Arab allies.
The secretary was reported to have privately called Mr. Trump a “moron” and
the president publicly criticized Mr. Tillerson for “wasting his time” with
a diplomatic outreach to North Korea.
Mr. Tillerson’s departure has been widely anticipated for
months, but associates have said he was intent on finishing out the year to
retain whatever dignity he could. Even so, an end-of-year exit would make his
time in office the shortest of any secretary of state whose tenure was not
ended by a change in presidents in nearly 120 years.
While some administration officials initially expected him
to be replaced by Nikki R. Haley, the ambassador to the United Nations,
Mr. Pompeo has become the White House favorite.
Mr. Pompeo, a former three-term member of Congress, has impressed
Mr. Trump during daily intelligence briefings and become a trusted policy
adviser even on issues far beyond the C.I.A.’s normal mandate, like health
care. But he has been criticized by intelligence officers for being too
politicalin his job.
Mr. Cotton has been perhaps Mr. Trump’s most important
supporter in the Senate on national security and immigration and a valued
outside adviser. Officials cautioned that there was still a debate about
whether Mr. Cotton was more valuable to the president in the Senate than in
taking over the spy agency in Langley, Va., but he is the consensus choice at
the moment.
Under Arkansas state law, Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican,
would appoint a replacement who could serve until the 2018 election. That could
put another seat in play during a midterm election when Republicans, with 52 of
100 seats in the Senate, cannot afford to take too many chances. If Mr. Cotton
stayed in the Senate, his seat would not be up for election again until 2020.
Asked about a possible move, Caroline Rabbitt Tabler, a
spokeswoman for Mr. Cotton, said, “Senator Cotton’s focus is on serving
Arkansans in the Senate.”
Mr. Tillerson’s appointment was something of an
experiment from the start. Never before had a president named a secretary of
state with no prior experience in government, politics or the military.
Mr.
Trump, who himself had no government or military experience before this year,
bet that Mr. Tillerson would be able to translate his formidable skills in the
corporate world to international diplomacy after 41 years at Exxon Mobil.
But Mr. Tillerson has often been on a different page than
Mr. Trump, and he has spent much of his time reorganizing the State Department,
slashing its budget and pushing out more than 2,000 career diplomats. Even
on that he ran into serious troubles. Just this week, the counsellor he brought
in to execute his plan quit after just three months.
A sign of his fading fortunes in the White House has been
the changing views of Mr. Kelly. Once a defender of Mr. Tillerson, Mr. Kelly is
described by colleagues as now having mixed opinions, seeing him as a wounded
figure who may no longer be able to be as effective as the president needs his
secretary to be.
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