Pompeo Is U.S. Secretary Of State As Iran, North Korea Issues Await
The U.S.
Senate confirmed Mike Pompeo as President Donald Trump's secretary of state on
Thursday, putting the former CIA director in a pivotal role to handle U.S.
foreign policy challenges such as North Korea and Iran.
Pompeo, a
former Army officer who was a Republican congressman, is regarded as a Trump
loyalist with hawkish world views.
He is
already deeply involved in diplomacy. Trump sent Pompeo to North Korea three
weeks ago to meet with the country's leader, Kim Jong Un, ahead of a summit
with the U.S. president to address Pyongyang's nuclear program.
Senators
voted 57-42 in favor of Pompeo, who had faced stiff resistance from Democrats
worried about his reputation for hawkishness and past harsh statements about
homosexuality and Islam.
Pompeo will
be forced quickly to address a wide array of other international challenges,
including long conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, Chinese expansionism
in Asia and Russian assertiveness.
Washington
is also working with European allies such as French President Emmanuel Macron
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel to decide whether to toughen an
international nuclear agreement with Iran.
Pompeo
narrowly avoided a historic rebuke by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Pompeo, who
became one of Trump's closest advisers during his 15 months at the CIA, faced
stiff opposition from Democrats, who worried he might be too closely aligned
with the president.
While in
Congress, Pompeo was an outspoken opponent of the Iran nuclear accord.
But he said
during his confirmation hearing that he was open to fixing, rather than blowing
apart, the pact, which the West believes is key to preventing Iran from getting
a nuclear bomb.
Opponents
also worried that Pompeo was too hawkish, and said his past remarks about homosexuals
and Islam made him unsuitable to represent the United States on the world
stage.
U.S.
senators said Pompeo was expected to hit the ground running and head off almost
immediately to a NATO foreign ministers meeting in Brussels on Friday.
Supporters said
Pompeo did well during 15 months leading the CIA, and said the country badly
needed a leader at the State Department, where staffing has been slashed with
many positions unfilled since Trump became president in January 2017.
Trump picked
the CIA's deputy director, Gina Haspel, to replace Pompeo as head of the spy
agency. If confirmed by the Senate, she would become the first woman to hold
the post.
Pompeo
avoided being the first nominee for secretary of state ever rejected by the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee only when Republican Senator Rand Paul, who
had vowed to oppose him, announced his support minutes before the committee
voted on Monday after pressure from the party. [L1N1S01YH]
None of the
10 Democrats on the 21-member committee supported the nominee.
Senator
Robert Menendez, the top Democrat on the foreign relations panel, was a vocal
opponent of Pompeo's confirmation, but said he did not think the bruising
confirmation fight would leave Pompeo wounded.
"He
obviously has the president's support. That will be meaningful to people in the
world," Menendez said on Wednesday, drawing a contrast with his
predecessor, Rex Tillerson, who often seemed to differ from the president.
Trump
abruptly fired former oil executive Tillerson last month.
No comments