Sec of State Tillerson Steps Up on Syria, Russia After Avoiding Spotlight

WASHINGTON (AP) —
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Criticized for his low-profile diplomacy, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is emerging from the shadows with a leading public role in shaping and explaining the Trump administration’s missile strikes in Syria. And he’s set for an even higher-profile mission, heading to Moscow under the twin clouds of Russia’s alleged U.S. election meddling and its possible support for a Syrian chemical weapons attack.

Since taking office in February, the former Exxon Mobil CEO has admittedly shunned the spotlight and the press. Yet Tillerson was surprisingly visible during last week’s announcement of the response to the gruesome chemical attack, fielding questions from reporters on and off camera, and then being pictured in an official White House photo seated next to President Donald Trump as they heard the result of the 59 cruise missiles that struck a Syrian military base.

Tillerson was a prominent fixture during the most important foreign policy period in Mr. Trump’s young presidency: a two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping that coincided with the strikes against Syria. He was by President Trump’s side during his meetings with President Xi and spoke publicly multiple times to address both issues.

It was Tillerson who delivered the Trump administration’s first blistering condemnation of Russia in the hours after the strikes. Standing in a cramped conference room alongside national security adviser H.R. McMaster, Tillerson said Moscow had “failed” to live up to its obligations under a 2013 agreement to strip Syria of its chemical weapons stockpiles. “Either Russia has been complicit or Russia has simply been incompetent in its ability to deliver on its end of that agreement,” he said.

On Sunday, he will make his first network interview appearances. In one of those interviews, Tillerson said he sees no reason for retaliation from Russia for the U.S. missile strikes. Russia maintains a close political and military alliance with President Bashar Assad’s government and has been accused of supporting its attacks against Syrians opposed to Assad’s rule — something Moscow adamantly denies.

In that interview airing Sunday on CBS, Tillerson said Russians were not targeted by the strikes. He also said the top U.S. priority in the region hadn’t changed and remained the defeat of Islamic State terrorists.

Next, Tillerson heads to Europe to gather with the foreign ministers of the other Group of 7 nations before venturing on eastward to become the first Trump Cabinet member to visit Moscow — and possibly meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The criticism from the foreign policy establishment’s left and right that has dogged his tenure is dying down.

Tillerson had faced questions about whether he understood that his new position meant he was now the face of the United States to the world, that he had to answer no longer to a small group of top shareholders but to more than 320 million Americans.

The secretary of state must be “the spokesman for American foreign policy,” said Eliot Cohen, a senior State Department official during George W. Bush’s presidency who is now a professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies. “This is the administration’s first crisis but it won’t be their last by a long shot, so he’s going to have to get used to this.”

Joining Mr. Trump at the president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, Tillerson was supposed to focus on the informal summit with President Xi. Instead, he was thrust to the forefront after photos of the bodies piled in heaps in Idlib, Syria, dramatically altered the agenda.

Only a week earlier, Tillerson had alarmed U.S. allies by indicating the U.S. was no longer interested in pushing for Syrian President Bashar Assad’s removal from power.

In the hours leading up to President Trump’s decision to order the strikes, he was among the most forward-leaning of President Trump’s top aides in suggesting the U.S. would deliver an “appropriate response.” He challenged Russia publicly in a way Trump appeared to be scrupulously avoiding and said of Assad early Thursday, “It would seem that there would be no role for him to govern the Syrian people.”

After the cruise missiles crashed down in Syria, Tillerson was calm and commanding in a question-and-answer session with journalists.

Cohen, a vocal conservative critic of President Trump’s foreign policy who has chided Tillerson for his reticence, said he saw Tillerson growing into the job. “I suspect you’ll see more of him as he grows more comfortable in dealing with the press and in his relationship with the president and the administration’s national security team,” Cohen said.

The challenge will be greater in Russia’s capital this week. He is arriving at a fragile point in U.S.-Russia relations, where he will have to confront the Kremlin’s anger over the missile strikes in Syria along with suspicion at home that Moscow may have even been complicit in the Syrian government’s chemical weapons attack. Senior U.S. military officials have said they are looking into whether Russia provided drone surveillance and helped Syrian forces try to cover up what they’d done.

Beyond Syria, there are disputes over Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region and support for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

At the same time, Tillerson carries to Moscow the weight of FBI and congressional investigations into Russia’s alleged interference in last year’s presidential election. President Trump campaign’s possible ties to the presumed Russian meddlers are also being probed.

“This is going to be Tillerson’s biggest test to date,” said Julianne Smith, a National Security Council and Defense Department official under President Barack Obama. She is now a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security. “He’s been getting poor reviews across the national security establishment, tons of questions about whether he has the intellect, the stamina, the courage to really take this position and fly with it and really soar.”

One early interpretation of Tillerson’s not-so-public diplomacy was that he would have a diminished role under Trump. Although aides vehemently denied that Tillerson had been sidelined, the impression was left of a man uncomfortable in his job.

The events of the past several days seem to have stanched such suggestions, and his increasingly public persona seems to reflect a greater confidence.

When he goes to Russia, keeping a low profile would likely be impossible, even if it were his goal.

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