U.S. allies look for clues on acting
Pentagon chief in European debut
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[February 13, 2019]
By Idrees Ali
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. allies will use
the opportunity of Patrick Shanahan's first NATO ministers meeting this
week to see whether the acting defense secretary will be as supportive
of the military alliance as his predecessor was, defense officials and
experts said.
Shanahan, a former Boeing Co executive who has mostly focused on
internal issues since he joined the Pentagon in July 2017, took over on
Jan. 1 from former secretary Jim Mattis, who quit over policy
differences with U.S. President Donald Trump.
In his resignation letter, Mattis laid bare what he saw as an
irreparable divide between himself and Trump, and implicitly criticized
the president for failing to value allies who have fought alongside the
United States in several wars. Mattis mentioned NATO twice.
Shanahan, who served as Mattis' deputy, is not as well known in foreign
policy circles, and allies are keen to see whether he will push back on
rhetoric by Trump that has questioned the need for NATO.
Until earlier this week, Shanahan had never visited Afghanistan or Iraq,
where the United States still has about 19,000 troops.
A European NATO diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
hope was that Shanahan would be someone they could trust and work with.
"Mattis was one of the few remaining senior Trump administration
officials we could rely on, so there's a great sense of loss," the
diplomat said.
"Frankly, Shanahan is an unknown to us."
While Trump has said Shanahan is doing a good job, there is no certainty
that he will be formally nominated for the position, which Trump
shuffled Mattis out of just 11 days after he resigned.
Shanahan has been serving in an acting capacity since the start of the
year. The longest-serving acting defense secretary, William Taft, did
the job for 60 days.
In a sign of just how precarious his situation is, the chairman of the
Senate Armed Services Committee said on Tuesday he did not think Trump
would nominate Shanahan.
Asked about Senator James Inhofe's comments, Shanahan told reporters in
Brussels: "Whether there is acting next to your name or not, it's the
same job, I'll do the job the same way. It's a pleasure to serve in this
role."
Derek Chollet, a former Pentagon official now at the German Marshall
Fund think tank, said it was not fair to expect Shanahan to be able to
calm nervous allies by himself, especially in an acting capacity.
A senior U.S. defense official, speaking on the condition of anonymity,
said Shanahan would back NATO during his talks in Brussels.
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President Donald Trump (L) listens next to Acting U.S. Defense
Secretary Patrick Shanahan during a Cabinet meeting on day 12 of the
partial U.S. government shutdown at the White House in Washington,
U.S., January 2, 2019. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
"The overarching message is one of bringing reassurance and
confidence to our alliance, that America remains deeply committed to
the alliance," the official said.
But the official added that Shanahan would push allies on the need
for burden sharing and meeting their international commitments, a
key demand of Trump's.
Allies are likely to seek reassurances on a number of key policy
areas, including on the future of NATO in Syria and Afghanistan, and
plans to withdraw from the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
(INF) Treaty with Russia.
In December, Trump confounded his own national security team and
international allies with a surprise decision to withdraw 2,000 U.S.
troops from Syria. Shanahan will meet a small group of defense
ministers in Munich to go over those plans.
On Afghanistan, U.S. officials have held several rounds of talks
with the Taliban in Qatar in what is widely seen as the most serious
bid yet for peace in Afghanistan, which has been at war since the
United States ousted the country's former leaders after the Sept.
11, 2001, attacks.
However, the talks have created uncertainty within Europe about what
it means for the NATO mission in the country, and individual
countries are reconsidering their troop presence.
The senior U.S. defense official said Shanahan would also talk to
allies about arms control, after the United States earlier this
month announced it would withdraw from the INF treaty in six months
unless Moscow ends its alleged violations of the landmark pact.
The official said the NATO summit would be an opportunity to discuss
any potential new arms control architecture and what is needed to
protect the NATO alliance.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; additional reporting by Robin Emmott and
Mike Stone; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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