WaPo Editorial Board To Democrats: Don't Play Games, Confirm Mike Pompeo
Rex Tillerson is gone and CIA Director Mike Pompeo is slated to be
the nest secretary of state. He’ll have to be confirmed for that post,
go through hearings, and Democrats have not been a disappointment in
showing how insufferable they are. Democratic opposition to Pompeo is growing, even those who voted to confirm him for CIA Director. Sen. Tim Kaine
(D-VA) is the latest to join Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) and Sen. Jeanne
Sheehan (D-NH). With John McCain (R-AZ) unavailable due to medical
reasons and Paul’s defection, finding the votes could get rough for
Republicans (via The Hill):
CIA
Director Mike Pompeo on Thursday [4/12] faced a grilling from Democrats
on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, suggesting he faces
uncertain prospects to win a panel vote to become the nation’s top
diplomat.
Pompeo declined to answer repeated questions from
Democrats related to the ongoing Russia investigations and was
challenged at several points to break with President Trump, as lawmakers
voiced concerns that he would be too deferential as secretary of State.
Pompeo’s
performance seemed widely to please Republicans on the panel, but with
the defection of Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and with Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.) home receiving treatment for cancer, he will need support from
Democrats to win confirmation.
Getting a majority vote from the panel — the first hurdle for the former Kansas congressman — could prove difficult.
Paul,
who vowed to oppose Pompeo’s nomination over his support for the Iraq
War and his past position on torture, sits on the committee. If the
committee’s 10 Democrats join him in voting against Pompeo, it would be a
11-10 vote against his confirmation.
No Democrats on the panel have so far offered their support.
Nevertheless, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said that Pompeo would be confirmed even if the panel vote fails to approve him. Even The Washington Post editorial board called on Democrats to quit playing games and confirm the man [emphasis mine]:
Mike
Pompeo’s confirmation hearing to become secretary of state arrived at a
moment when the Trump administration is grappling with a chaotic
confluence of actual and looming foreign crises — including some of its
own making. President Trump is contemplating military strikes against
Syria while also pushing for a U.S. pullout; he has committed to
attempting to negotiate a nuclear deal with North Korea while
threatening to repudiate the nuclear pact with Iran. He is waging a
trade war against China and Japan while counting on their strategic
cooperation against the regime of Kim Jong Un. And he is doing all this
with a badly depleted national security apparatus: Dozens of senior
positions are vacant at the State Department, and the newly arrived
national security adviser, John Bolton, has started with a purge of
senior staff at the White House.
Mr. Pompeo, who has a reputation
as a hawk and who in Congress relentlessly pursued groundless attacks
against Hillary Clinton’s State Department, did his best on Thursday to
be reassuring. He stressed that he favored diplomatic solutions with
Iran and North Korea; he played down the likely consequences of a
decision by Mr. Trump to scrap the Iran deal next month. Importantly, he
promised to defend the State Department’s budget and to quickly seek to
fill its many vacant positions, which would be a welcome departure from
the odd management style of the departed Rex Tillerson.
[…]
Democrats
who pressed Mr. Pompeo on his record, including his questionable
statements about Muslims, have legitimate concerns. But rejecting or
delaying his nomination, as Mr. Trump juggles multiple crises without
adequate counsel, probably would make an already parlous situation worse.
Mr. Pompeo should be deployed to Foggy Bottom in the hope that he will
fulfill his promise to revive and reassert U.S. diplomacy
No comments:
Post a Comment