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Diplomats describe all-time low in morale at State under Trump
The Hill ^ | 10/21/19 06:00 AM EDT | REID WILSON

Posted on 10/21/2019 6:59:44 PM PDT by robowombat

BY REID WILSON - 10/21/19 06:00 AM EDT

The Trump administration's perennial push for steep budget cuts, an exodus of senior staffers with decades of experience and constant allegations that agency employees represent a deep state has sent morale at the State Department to an unprecedented low.

On top of that, President Trump has fired a senior diplomat after a whisper campaign mounted by his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and abandoned steadfast allies in the Middle East to fend for themselves on the battlefield at the behest of Turkey's government.

Current and former diplomats say the weight of those events is taking a startling and measurable toll on American foreign relations, and on their ability to carry out policy set by the White House.

Those diplomats are increasingly concerned that the White House and senior State Department leadership do not have their backs, particularly after Trump’s allies launched a whisper campaign that ended in the recall of Marie Yovanovitch as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.

They also worry the president’s decision to withdraw American troops from northern Syria — abandoning longtime Kurdish allies who fought the war against the Islamic State — will cause other allies to think twice about partnering with the United States.

“We have squandered our global leadership, alienated our friends and emboldened our enemies,” said one U.S. ambassador, who asked not to be named to provide a candid assessment. Morale in recent weeks, the ambassador said, “is at a new low, although I am not sure it could fall much lower than where it has been for the past three years.”

The State Department and White House did not respond to requests for comment.

In interviews, half a dozen current and former senior foreign service officers said the last few weeks have undermined what little faith they had left in Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, one of Trump’s closest advisers.

Pompeo arrived in Foggy Bottom after diplomats endured a trying year under his predecessor, Rex Tillerson, who tried to slash his own budget and let senior civil and foreign service members walk out the door — a period one former ambassador called the “red terror.” Tillerson’s proposed cuts were so dramatic that Congress refused to allow them.

Pompeo and his top deputy held several town hall meetings and distributed videos of his foreign trips, dubbed “Miles with Mike,” in what Pompeo called an effort to rebuild the State Department’s “swagger.”

“When Pompeo came in, people were absolutely willing to give him the benefit of the doubt,” said Laura Kennedy, a former U.S. ambassador to Turkmenistan and deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs in the George W. Bush administration.

“Our cousins up the river in Langley said, ‘Hey, he’s a good guy,’ ” the former ambassador said, referring to the year Pompeo spent running the CIA earlier on in Trump’s presidency.

But Pompeo’s alliance with Trump has come at the cost of his reputation with career officials. He was on the July 25 phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, when Trump promised that Yovanovitch was “going to go through some things.” On Wednesday, Pompeo’s former top aide, Michael McKinley, told House lawmakers that Pompeo did nothing when McKinley urged him to offer Yovanovitch a show of public support.

Pompeo on Sunday defended Trump’s recall of Yovanovitch on ABC’s “This Week.”

"Ambassadors serve at the pleasure of the president,” Pompeo said. “And when a president loses confidence in an ambassador — it's not in that ambassador, the State Department or America's best interests for them to continue to stay in their post.”

Current and former officials have panned Pompeo's handling of the situation.

“Trump is Trump. I guess people just sort of get used to it. But a big change is in the perception of Pompeo,” Kennedy said. “Big fat F in terms of this one."

The irony of that phone call, in which Trump pushed for Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Bdien, who sat on the board of a Ukrainian energy company, was that rooting out corruption has been at the heart of American policy toward Ukraine for years. Yovanovitch had made fighting corruption a cornerstone of her years in Kiev.

“Here’s a U.S. ambassador pushing a major U.S. policy platform, fighting corruption. We all knew Ukraine’s only chance was to get a handle on the corruption going on in that country,” said the former ambassador who spoke to The Hill.

“We’re no longer the shining city on the hill. We’ve been out there espousing American values, and then we come home to see America isn’t espousing American values,” the former ambassador said. “You cannot go overseas and lecture a partner nation on corruption when you’ve got this going on with the president’s sons. When people are currying favor with the White House by first and foremost booking themselves into the Trump Hotel in Washington, D.C.”

Now, the foreign service officers who pride themselves on carrying out their orders from Washington, regardless of whether those orders are given by a Democratic or Republican administration, believe that they serve at the pleasure of a president who views them as members of a so-called deep state.

“We do not expect, nor should we, that we can become the target of blatant political warfare apparently supported by our own department leadership,” the current ambassador said. “Who knew that an administration could sink so low as to sell out its own employees, carrying out stated U.S. policy, for personal political gain?”

It has not been lost on current and former State Department officials that the first people to willingly sit down with the House Intelligence Committee during its impeachment inquiry have been ambassadors, including Yovanovitch, McKinley, former U.S. special envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker and Gordon Sondland, a Trump ally and U.S. ambassador to the European Union. Another career foreign policy expert, Fiona Hill, also testified.

“In the last couple of weeks, it’s almost like a dam has burst,” Kennedy said. “People are just much more willing to speak out.”

Some said that while the decision to end Yovanovitch’s tenure early would harm their ability to advance American interests through diplomacy, the decision to pull troops out of Syria and leave Kurdish allies to fight Turkey's much more advanced military would cause more lasting damage.

“As shocking as the Ukraine situation is, Syria kills us,” the former ambassador said. “This is an ally in a war. All the other allies are watching how we treat our allies.”

Inside the State Department, tensions between political appointees and career appointees are rising, sources said. Yovanovitch’s firing has underscored the tensions — and the lack of trust — between career officials and political appointees. Several sources said they felt they were being scrutinized by political appointees who could report disloyalty to senior officials.

“Every day, you’re suspect. You never know when you’re going to be put to the guillotine,” one senior foreign service officer said.

The staff reductions that began under Tillerson have left gaping holes that remain today, more than a year after he left the administration. Eight of the 28 assistant secretary positions are being run by acting secretaries who have not been confirmed by the Senate. Two more are vacant. One of six undersecretaries is acting, and two more posts — overseeing public diplomacy and civilian security, democracy and human rights — are vacant.

“A number of bureaus are being run by career people, but they’re not nominated [to fill those roles on a permanent basis]. It sends a very strong signal of, ‘We don’t trust you, we don’t respect you, and we won’t empower you,’ ” Kennedy said.

Amid the departure of experienced senior officers, and further White House efforts to slash the State Department's budget, there are worrying signs that the ranks of the foreign service are not being replenished. The number of applicants who have taken the Foreign Service exam, the first step toward becoming a career foreign service officer, has fallen every year since 2009, when former President Obama took office.

During Trump’s presidency, the number of applicants has dropped even more precipitously. In 2018, just 9,168 people took the test, the first step on an exhaustive path to becoming a Foreign Service officer; that figure was less than half the number who applied in 2013, according to the American Foreign Service Association.

“What makes this really different is it comes against 2 1/2 or almost three years of unrelenting criticism of the foreign service, the civil service, constant denigration of the work, being told you’re part of the deep swamp,” Kennedy said. “This is a building that’s been very seriously battered.”


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: deepstate; sospompeo; statedepartment; trumpstatedept
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To: FLT-bird

All the seditious state dept losers should be fired immediately. I’d love to see these pathetic bums out of a job. They are disgusting in their traitorous behavior and their smugness. What worthless poltroons.


21 posted on 10/21/2019 7:33:53 PM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reefucation Camp???)
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To: robowombat

Diplomats describe all-time low in morale at State under Trump
)))))))))))))))))\

That is one of the best headlines I have ever seen.


22 posted on 10/21/2019 7:35:34 PM PDT by Maris Crane
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To: robowombat

Quit! Get a private sector job. Learn to code. Stop whining.


23 posted on 10/21/2019 7:40:36 PM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: robowombat

Well, better them than us like it has been over the last 75 years.


24 posted on 10/21/2019 7:44:50 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (This space for rent.)
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To: robowombat

they are welcome to resign and get the hell out.


25 posted on 10/21/2019 7:47:37 PM PDT by euram
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To: robowombat

Good State has been the abode of Anti American scum for decades, maybe they will all quit


26 posted on 10/21/2019 7:48:36 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (They would have to abandon leftism to achieve sanity. Freeper Olog-hai)
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To: canuck_conservative

Wasn’t she also the one stonewalling the Ukrainian prosecutor who was trying to send information about corrupt US officials to Trump?


27 posted on 10/21/2019 7:52:58 PM PDT by Sgt_Schultze (When your business model depends on slave labor, you're always going to need more slaves.)
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To: robowombat

Good. Now be men and women of principle and quit your jobs.


28 posted on 10/21/2019 7:57:13 PM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: tennmountainman

Average salary of Sec of State Employee = $103 K

https://www.payscale.com/research/US/Employer=U.S._Department_Of_State/Salary


29 posted on 10/21/2019 8:02:05 PM PDT by jcon40 (The other post before yours really nails it for me. IOr keep people from / PC ing in ver and alway)
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To: robowombat
And this "bad new", why?

State has been thoroughly infested and controlled by communists since the mid-to-late 1930's...

No President has undertaken any effort to remove this powerful communist malignancy... In fact, several Presidents essentially overtly abetted them in their destructive policy machinations... (FDR, Carter, Clinton, Obunghole)
Most of the rest of them simply "turned a blind eye" (Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Reagan, Bush I, Bush II) and, so far, the jury is still out on Trump.

30 posted on 10/21/2019 8:03:23 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: robowombat

Roaches! A bunch cock-a-roaches!


31 posted on 10/21/2019 8:03:30 PM PDT by Road Warrior ‘04 (Boycott The NFL! Molon Labe! Oathkeeper)
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To: robowombat

It’s what they have earned....traitors for a very long time. Whitaker Chambers is in heaven laughing saying I warned you


32 posted on 10/21/2019 8:08:38 PM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: Sgt_Schultze

Yes.

She’s also the one who gave the Ukraine officials a list of American names of people who SHOULD NOT BE INVESTIGATED.

If they think well of her...they should all be thrown out!


33 posted on 10/21/2019 8:11:17 PM PDT by Maris Crane
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To: All

Foggy Bottom Hole - learn to code.

Wait. Don’t. I don’t think ya’ll would be suited for it.

Hmmm Janitors? No. That would require a work ethic.

Prostitution. There ya go!


34 posted on 10/21/2019 8:15:03 PM PDT by TheTimeOfMan (The Eloi unexpectedly protected the Morlocks from rogue Eloi as they themselves prepared to be eaten)
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To: robowombat

fire ‘em all on day one of Trump’s second term ... and for those protected by the civil service, reassign them to Haita, Nirobi, Congo, and other assorted shitholes ...


35 posted on 10/21/2019 8:25:16 PM PDT by catnipman (Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!)
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To: robowombat

I only wish employment was at an all time low at State.


36 posted on 10/21/2019 8:27:46 PM PDT by bigbob (Trust Trump. Trust the Plan.)
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To: robowombat

The 1952 Republican Platform had the right idea:

“We shall eliminate from the State Department and from every Federal office, all, wherever they may be found, who share responsibility for the needless predicaments and perils in which we find ourselves. We shall also sever from the public payroll the hordes of loafers, incompetents and unnecessary employees who clutter the administration of our foreign affairs. “


37 posted on 10/21/2019 8:40:51 PM PDT by oblomov
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To: butlerweave

You assholes can quit anytime you want!


38 posted on 10/21/2019 8:43:33 PM PDT by Bommer (2020 - Vote all incumbent congressmen and senators out! VOTE THE BUMS OUT!!!)
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To: robowombat

Same moral at the DNC. Funny that!


39 posted on 10/21/2019 9:00:24 PM PDT by Dogbert41 (Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord!)
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To: robowombat

Truly— schadenfreude... indeed. And utter amazement of the shite peddled in this article of “the hill of shite” “blog”.

Beyond the ridiculous hailing of Yovanovitch (aka- the cutout paymaster of recycled US aid back to people like the Bidens, and obamaumao and yes... hitlery, and of course the law fir Perkins Coie as the pass through for payment of this money to GPS Fusion/Glen Simpson.... there’s this whopper:

....As shocking as the Ukraine situation is, Syria kills us,” the former ambassador said. “This is an ally in a war. All the other allies are watching how we treat our allies.”
Syria was NEVER our ally in a war— not even against Saddam. Syria is and always has been a Russian client state. It took Trump to get the Russians and Syrians to work together and oust the common enemy of ISIS. No thanks to the Turks in general or even specifically— under this clown Erdogan.

Just... appallingly full of crap article.


40 posted on 10/21/2019 9:01:39 PM PDT by John S Mosby (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
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