
PHOTO: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, Sept. 12, 2017. (Doug Mills/New York Times via Redux, FILE)
Just hours after his very public firing Tuesday, an emotional Secretary of State Rex Tillerson came to the State Department
briefing room to tell his side of the story, saying he had received a
call shortly after noon from the president aboard Air Force One, and had
spoken as well with White House chief of staff John Kelly.
He did not otherwise mention or thank President Donald Trump.
Tillerson first learned he was being dismissed when Trump tweeted this morning that he was nominating CIA Director Mike Pompeo as his new secretary of state.
Tillerson
announced he was delegating all his responsibilities to Deputy
Secretary of State John Sullivan effective at the end of the day Tuesday
and that his commission as secretary of state would terminate at
midnight March 31. In the interim, he will deal with a few
administrative issues and work toward a "smooth and orderly transition"
for Pompeo.
Sullivan
was in the room with Tillerson when he spoke, with a half dozen other
top aides, including his chief of staff Margaret Peterlin. It's unclear
now if Peterlin and other top officials with close ties to Tillerson
will lose their jobs, too, but Tillerson encouraged "those confirmed [by
the Senate], as well as those in acting positions, to remain at their
post and continue our mission at the State Department and working with
the inter-agency process."
Noticeably
absent was Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public
Affairs Steven Goldstein, who earlier in the day released a statement
refuting the White House's narrative on when and how Tillerson found out
he was being fired. Just hours after that, Goldstein - the
fourth-highest-ranking official at State and one of the only Trump
appointees - was fired as well, after three months on the job.
With
Tillerson and Goldstein gone, nearly all the top positions at the State
Department will be left vacant. Among the six Under Secretary roles,
four have been vacant, a fifth now is open with Goldstein's firing, and
the sixth is filled by career diplomat Tom Shannon, who announced last
month he is retiring. Shannon, the Under Secretary for Political
Affairs, has said he will stay on until a replacement is found. More
than a dozen assistant secretary roles remain vacant or filled by senior
diplomats in an acting capacity, and overseas, more than three dozen
ambassadorships are empty, with the mission's number two leading the
embassy day-to-day.
Tillerson
was visibly emotional in the briefing room, especially when he first
walked up to the podium and began addressing the press, with his voice
cutting out at times and his face red.
It
was just last week that Tillerson got choked up when addressing why he
took the role in the first place. At George Mason University Tuesday, he
recounted his father's and uncle's military service - and how he missed
the draft during the Vietnam War by three numbers. Instead, he went off
to college and worked 41 1/2 years for Exxon Mobil, and "as I reflected
on things at that point, I said I hadn’t really done anything yet. It’s
my time to serve, and that’s why I’m doing it," he told the audience.
The
former CEO, who says he still thinks of himself as an Eagle Scout, said
he saw the job as a form of serving his country. Despite his
disagreements with Trump on policy, personnel, and leadership style, he
remained committed to the role.
"I look forward to having a very, very successful 2018," he told CNN in January. "I intend to be here for the whole year."
Tillerson's
father passed away the week before his comments about his father's
military service. He had been home for a week dealing with that, before
his speech Tuesday and a week-long trip through Africa.
It
was in the middle of the night in Nairobi, Kenya, that he was awakened
by White House chief of staff John Kelly. While the White House says
Kelly told Tillerson then that he was fired, a senior State Department
official said that Tillerson was only warned that such a tweet may be
coming.
But
Trump has tweeted about his cabinet secretaries before, only to keep
them in place. For months now, he has pilloried Attorney General Jeff
Sessions, but has not yet fired him.
Tillerson cut short the trip to Africa, returning early Tuesday morning at 4 AM.
It was hours later that the news officially came in Trump's tweet.\
In
his goodbye address, Tillerson pointed to progress on North Korea,
Afghanistan, and Syria as some of his accomplishments and thanked his
State Department colleagues, as well as Pentagon officials and members
of the military, for the "privilege" of serving with them.
"To
the 300-plus million Americans, thank you for your devotion to a free
and open society, to acts of kindness toward one another, to honesty,
and the quiet hard work that you do every day to support this government
with your tax dollars," he said.
"I'll
now return to private life, as a private citizen, as a proud American,
proud of the opportunity I've had to have serve my country," he
finished, leaving the room with a wave and without taking questions.
PHOTO: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson walks down a hallway after
speaking at a news conference at the State Department in Washington,
March 13, 2018. (Andrew Harnik/AP)
source: yahoo

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