Exclusive: Pompeo seeks rapprochement
with alienated U.S. diplomats
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[September 17, 2018]
By Arshad Mohammed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo has nearly doubled promotions of top American
diplomats as he seeks to restore diplomatic ties with a workforce
alienated by his predecessor, Rex Tillerson.
Since taking over in April, Pompeo has lavished attention on diplomats
demoralized by the former oil executive's distant management style,
reluctance to consult in-house experts and inability to get personnel
choices through President Donald Trump's White House.
The charm offensive by the former Republican lawmaker and CIA director
includes resuming the hiring of diplomats' family members when posted
abroad, cheerleading emails to staff about his travels and a push to
replenish the top ranks of U.S. diplomacy, officials said.
The most tangible sign of Pompeo's effort may be the State Department
promotion lists, disclosed internally since Aug. 31 and reviewed by
Reuters, which show Pompeo has sharply increased the number of diplomats
promoted to three of the top four ranks.
According to a provisional agency document circulated internally on
Friday, Pompeo recommended doubling the number of "career ministers" -
the second-highest rank in the U.S. foreign service - to eight from
four. (https://tmsnrt.rs/2xcHMTc)
Pompeo also proposed nearly doubling those promoted to the third rank,
"minister-counselor," to 68 from 35 the year before.
For the critical level of 'officer counsellor'- the entry point for the
"senior" foreign service and the hurdle at which many careers in the
up-or-out system founder - he increased the number by more than 50
percent to 97 from 63.
The State Department had no immediate comment on the data.
An official who declined to be identified said the final number of
promotions for fiscal 2018, which ends on Sept. 30, could exceed those
published over the past few weeks, in part because the lists do not
include some people recommended for promotion who have yet to complete
mandatory career management programs.
Tillerson, who cut promotions in six out of the seven top ranks, said at
the time he did so because of earlier hiring surges and because the
agency's "position base" would "contract over the next couple of years."
That decision, and Tillerson's embrace of roughly 30 percent budget cuts
that Trump proposed but Congress largely rejected, angered many
department employees, for whom protecting one's budget is an axiom of
bureaucratic warfare in Washington.
Tillerson, whom Trump fired via tweet on March 13, argued in a Nov. 28,
2017, speech that he had inherited an agency budget that was at a record
high and was unsustainable. A Tillerson spokeswoman did not immediately
reply to a request for comment.
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo waves to the media before his
meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry at the State
Department in Washington, U.S., August 8, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File
Photo
'MORE RAPPROCHEMENT THAN DETENTE'
Pompeo brought some assets to his new role, notably a good rapport
with Trump, an insider's grasp of Congress and deeper understanding
of the federal bureaucracy from his CIA service.
"We will continue to see robust promotion opportunities in the
future absent any significant shifts in our budget," Pompeo wrote in
an internal memo on Aug. 31.
"It's more rapprochement than detente," one senior State Department
official said on condition of anonymity, alluding to U.S.-Soviet
efforts to ease Cold War tensions. "He's doing more than just trying
to end the hostility. He is reaching out."
Beyond antagonizing employees by working to redesign and shrink the
agency, Tillerson upset many by forcing out or under-using the
department's "career ambassadors" - the top foreign service rank
typically given to only a handful of diplomats, officials said. Four
career ambassadors stepped down in 2017.
Pompeo, in contrast, has gone out of his way to praise the four new
career ambassadors whose elevation was just announced.
"This is the highest and most prestigious rank at the Foreign
Service. They should all be very proud. I know I’m proud of them,"
Pompeo told reporters. "They’re great leaders."
While many State Department officials have said they appreciate the
ways in which Pompeo has sought to build back morale, one of his
signature efforts - rebranding the agency as the "Department of
Swagger" - has drawn some ridicule and eye rolls, both inside and
outside the State Department.
Pompeo, who graduated first in his class at the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, said on his first day at the State Department
that he would work on "getting back our swagger" and putting the
U.S. diplomatic corps in "every corner," drawing loud applause from
hundreds of staffers.
U.S. diplomats are taught, however, to be understated rather than
overbearing, given U.S. economic and military might.
"I have not heard anyone say: 'This is awesome. Thumbs up. Fist
bump,'" one agency official said of Pompeo's swagger campaign. "No."
(Reporting by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Mary Milliken and Peter
Cooney)
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