'CEO' Tillerson faces internal skeptics,
crisis-battling White House
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[February 20, 2017]
By Lesley Wroughton and Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - One of Rex
Tillerson's first directives as U.S. secretary of state was an order to
senior staff that his briefing materials not exceed two pages.
It was a reflection of Tillerson's management style honed at the helm of
Exxon Mobil, an oil company known for its relentless focus on
efficiency, and one reason his closest aides at the State Department
refer to him as "the CEO" rather than "the Secretary."
More than a dozen current and former U.S. officials familiar with
briefing procedures said Tillerson's predecessors would typically
request far more detailed information. His aide R.C. Hammond said the
directive reflected Tillerson's focus on key facts rather than lack of
interest in finer points of foreign policy.
"He is asking people to be efficient with their information," Hammond
said, adding that if Tillerson needed more information he would ask for
it. "He is a decision-maker and he needs the facts in front of him."
As a first-time government official with no prior diplomatic experience,
Tillerson faces close scrutiny over how successful he will be in
managing both the State Department bureaucracy and its relations with
Donald Trump and his administration.
Senior State Department officials who have attended meetings with
Tillerson say they find him sociable and a man of substance, whose
direct manner and probing questions reflect his training as an engineer
seeking to solve problems rather than play politics.
The veteran oil executive also made a good impression on his first
foreign trip to a Group of 20 summit in Bonn, Germany, last week. Four
senior diplomats who met him told Reuters they were relieved to find
that he was pragmatic and open to dialogue.
Yet a key concern for U.S. diplomats is how effective his team can be in
shaping foreign policy in the new administration. Just two State
Department positions of 116 key posts requiring executive branch
nomination have been filled, according to the nonpartisan Partnership
for Public Service - Tillerson's and that of U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations.
For example, Tillerson still has no deputy after Trump rejected his top
choice, Elliott Abrams.
"People want to back him," one veteran senior official said about the
former Exxon Mobil boss. "But people are feeling that this building is
being stripped," said the official, referring to a sense that with so
many top positions vacant, the State Department is not fully equipped to
help make policy in the new administration.
There is also unease over possible deep staff cuts and the future of
some departments. Two people said employees in the Bureau of Management
and Resources were told to apply for other positions within the State
Department. Hammond, Tillerson's aide said no decision had been taken to
close that division.
IN OR OUT OF THE LOOP?
On one recent matter of longstanding U.S. foreign policy, Tillerson
appeared to be sidelined.
On Feb. 14, while Tillerson was at a dinner with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu in a State Department dining room, news headlines
emerged suggesting the United States was backing away from supporting a
two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians.
The two-state solution is the bedrock of the international community's
policy for a settlement between Israel and the Palestinians, but Trump
suggested last week he was open to abandoning it if both sides agree.
"No one had been informed of any changes in policy and the Secretary was
about to leave on his first major trip," said one senior State
Department official, referring to Tillerson's visit to Bonn.
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Rex Tillerson, the former chairman and chief executive officer of
Exxon Mobil, testifies during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee
confirmation hearing to become U.S. Secretary of State on Capitol
Hill in Washington January 11, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File
Photo
Tillerson's acting deputy Tom Shannon also did not take part in
Trump's meeting with Netanyahu at the White House the following day
when his boss was on his way to Europe, according to one U.S.
official.
It was unclear whether Tillerson had been left out of the loop
deliberately or by accident, said two officials.
A White House official told Reuters he did not know whether
Tillerson was briefed in advance. In response to broader concerns
about communication between the State Department and the new
administration, he said both coordinated "very well."
"There are open lines of communications in both directions," the
official, who declined to be named, said. "The White House and the
State Department coordinate closely across a full range of issues
that concern both organizations."To be sure, on another important
issue, Tillerson had his say in persuading Trump to back
Washington's stance on "One China" policy, which acknowledges
Beijing's position that Taiwan is part of it. Trump has in the past
appeared to question whether the United States would continue to
respect that.
Hammond said Tillerson was on the phone with Trump several times a
day.
"This is the general style of the president to have quick check-ins
with people, get people's advice on things," he said. "Information
for CEOs flows up, and as a former CEO (Tillerson) understands
that."
Tillerson has said little publicly since he started and his aides
are quick to draw a contrast between him and predecessor John Kerry,
a former senator and presidential candidate who reveled in extensive
foreign travel and deal making.
"Tillerson is not John Kerry, it is unfair to compare the two," said
Hammond. "He will quietly go about his job as a counselor and
advisor to the president."
For Tillerson's State Department the concern is how to maintain a
similar degree of communication with an administration grappling
with a succession of crises, nine officials involved in foreign
policy and security issues, said.
Over the past month the White House has faced legal setbacks over
its immigration orders, the resignation of Trump's national security
adviser and an investigation into possible links between his
campaign and Russian intelligence.
Monday's resignation of Michael Flynn, who served as Trump's
national security adviser for just 24 days, in particular created a
vacuum at the National Security Council, which acts as a key partner
for the State Department in formulating Washington's foreign policy.
(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed, Jonathan Landay and Steve
Holland in Washington and Andrea Shalal in Bonn. Editing by Warren
Strobel and Tomasz Janowski)
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