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Wounded Tillerson vows ‘quick wins’ for US diplomacy

By AFP
05 December 2017   |   3:54 pm
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson attempted to strike an upbeat tone Tuesday as he embarked on his first foreign trip since the White House called his future into question.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks during a joint press conference with EU foreign policy chief at the European Union Council building in Brussels on December 5, 2017. Tillerson meets his EU and NATO counterparts in Brussels on December 5 to shore up ties, with allies insisting he still plays a “key role” despite doubts over his future, before a two-day NATO meeting set to focus on North Korea’s missile programme and concerns over perceived hostility from Russia. / AFP PHOTO / JOHN THYS

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson attempted to strike an upbeat tone Tuesday as he embarked on his first foreign trip since the White House called his future into question.

Tillerson arrived in Brussels for talks with EU and NATO leaders trailed by reports that President Donald Trump is frustrated with his performance and plans to sack him.

Before he began his official program in Brussels, Tillerson met US diplomats serving in the city to reassure them about his much-criticised efforts to renew US policy.

He admitted that work to recruit new senior talent to the State Department to deliver Trump’s agenda had been slow, but he insisted his reform agenda was picking up speed.

And, while he has not yet completed any of his main policy priorities, from developing a working relationship with Russia to facing down North Korea, he said progress has been made.

“While we don’t have any wins on the board yet, I can tell you we’re in a much better position to advance America’s interests around the world than we were 10 months ago,” he told staff and their families at the US embassy in Brussels.

He lavished praise on the “acting” senior officials who have stepped up to run US diplomacy as Trump’s administration struggles to find staff for key positions.

“The State Department is not missing a beat,” he said, referring to his efforts to reform his own department with a view to cutting its budget by up to a third.

This process is entering its final phase and he said there would be some “quick wins” before the end of the year so that staff will see “where this is going”.

Last week long-standing tensions between Trump and his chief envoy exploded into the open with a string of leaks from the White House suggesting his job is on the line.

Both Trump and Tillerson dismissed the reports but admitted they have had differences over policy — and the president insisted in a tweet that “I call a the shots”.

The apparent rift undermined Tillerson just as he embarked on an intense diplomatic journey to Europe to reassure allies and apply pressure to adversaries like Russia.

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