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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 7, 2017
Mattis clashing with Trump transition team over Pentagon staffing
Following a private meeting Nov. 19, President-elect Donald Trump calls retired 4-star General James 'Mad Dog' Mattis 'the real deal'. (The Washington Post)
By Josh Rogin January 6 at 7:00 AM
Retired
U.S. Marine Corps General James Mattis has been chosen to be secretary
of defense by President-elect Donald Trump, according to people familiar
with the decision. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)
Following a private meeting Nov. 19, President-elect Donald Trump calls retired 4-star General James 'Mad Dog' Mattis 'the real deal'. (The Washington Post)
By Josh Rogin January 6 at 7:00 AM
This post was updated at 11:55 a.m. Jan. 6.
The honeymoon seems to be ending between retired Gen. James N. Mattis
and Donald Trump’s transition team amid an increasingly acrimonious
dispute over who will get top jobs in the Defense Department — and who
gets to make those decisions.
With only two weeks left before Inauguration Day and days before
Mattis’s Senate confirmation hearing, most major Pentagon civilian
positions remain unfilled. Behind the scenes, Mattis has been rejecting
large numbers of candidates offered by the transition team for several
top posts, two sources close to the transition said. The dispute over
personnel appointments is contributing to a tenser relationship between
Mattis and the transition officials, which could set the stage for turf
wars between the Pentagon and the White House in the coming Trump
administration.
The Trump transition team was already considering candidates for a host
of Defense Department top jobs when Trump announced Dec. 1 that he
intended to nominate “Mad Dog” Mattis to lead the military.
The Mattis pick was seen by Republicans around Washington as an
indication that Trump would rely on senior and experienced officials to
shape and implement his national security and foreign policies. Many
“Never Trump” Republicans also thought this might be their way into
service despite having opposed Trump in the GOP primary.
Initially, both Mattis and the Trump team intended to engage in a
collaborative process whereby Mattis would be given significant
influence and participation in selecting top Pentagon appointees.
But the arrangement started going south only two weeks later when Mattis
had to learn from the news media that Trump had selected Vincent Viola,
a billionaire Army veteran, to be secretary of the Army, one source
close to the transition said.
“Mattis was furious,” said the source. “It made him suspicious of the transition team, and things devolved from there.”
Service secretaries represent potential alternate power centers inside
the Defense Department, and Mattis as defense secretary has an interest
in having secretaries who are loyal to him and don’t have independent
relationships with the White House.
Mattis is also pushing for the Trump transition team to allow “Never
Trump” Republicans to serve in the Pentagon, but so far the Trump team
is refusing.
One position that is a source of tension is undersecretary of defense
for intelligence, a powerful post that oversees all Defense Department
intelligence agencies, which include the National Security Agency and
the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, President-elect Trump’s national
security adviser-designate, was DIA director until he was sacked by
Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. following a
dispute with then-Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence Michael G.
Vickers.
Mattis has rejected all of the names the Trump team has offered to be
the top intelligence official in the department, another transition
source said. Mattis is also unlikely to accept Trump’s top Pentagon
transition landing team official, Mira Ricardel, as a top official. She was rumored to be in line to be undersecretary of defense for policy, a hugely influential job.
“Let’s put it this way, he’s being very picky about the options
presented to him,” said the source, who was not authorized to talk about
internal deliberations.
Transition sources also said that David McCormick, a hedge fund manager
and former Army officer, is still Trump’s likely pick to be deputy defense secretary, the No. 2 job under Mattis.
The personnel dispute could be the first sign of tension between Mattis
and Flynn. As a four-star general and head of Central Command, Mattis
outranked Flynn when Flynn was DIA director, a three-star position. If
confirmed, Mattis would be a Cabinet member and a member of the
president’s National Security Council, but Flynn has a close
relationship with Trump and the duty of coordinating between all the
national security agencies.
The Trump transition team did not respond to a request for comment.
Meanwhile, Flynn is busily filling up the National Security Council
staff with military and intelligence officers he knows personally. For
example, as the Nelson Report first reported, Flynn intends to make
Matthew Pottinger the senior director for Asia on the NSC staff.
Pottinger, a former Wall Street Journal reporter in China, joined the Marinesin
2005. While deployed in Afghanistan as an intelligence officer, he
worked closely with Flynn and co-authored a memo on how to fix
intelligence operations in Afghanistan that was later released by a Washington think tank in 2010.
Flynn has also been meeting foreign officials, especially from Europe, with Sebastian Gorka, a
professor and vice president of the Institute of World Politics, who
was born in Britain to parents who fled Hungary. What position Gorka
will have in Flynn’s NSC staff is unclear. Both Pottinger and Gorka are
well-respected but their new prominence has raised concerns that Flynn
is placing too much emphasis on military officials and military experts,
in effect militarizing the NSC staff.
K.T. McFarland, who is set to be Flynn’s top deputy, is pushing for more
civilian and policy-focused NSC staff appointments, transition sources
said.
Several Washington foreign policy experts who are in touch with the
Trump transition team said that overall, there’s no uniformity in the
way each department is being handled and no real understanding of how
much autonomy each Cabinet member will have in running his or her
agency.
Many expect the agencies to have more power than usual because the Trump
team is planning to slash the NSC staff from more than 400 people to
about 150 personnel. Then again, national security officials outside the
White House may find it difficult to exert influence with a president
who often alters major policies by tweet.
Some chaos and turf battles are to be expected in any presidential
transition but the Trump team is off to a bad start. Trump often touts
his talent in selecting good people. If he wants to keep those people
happy, he should work to settle their disputes and address their
grievances before they get out of hand.
UPDATE: The Trump transition team emailed me this
statement: “We are ahead of schedule with assembling the most qualified
cabinet and administration in history. Any implication contrary to that
is completely false and from sources who do not have any knowledge of
our transition efforts.”
