This is not good news, especially given the developing diplomatic crisis in Qatar:
Rex Tillerson attempting to run State Department with only two close aides out of fear of leaks: www.rawstory.com/2017/06/rex-tillerson-attempting-to-run-state-department-with-only-two-close-aides-out-of-fear-of-leaks-report/
A new POLITICO report suggests Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, the former CEO of ExxonMobil, has become increasingly isolated and is relying on two senior aides while failing to fill a hundreds of senior seats in the State Department.
According to POLITICO, Tillerson leans almost exclusively on his chief of staff Margaret Peterlin and policy chief Brian Hook, two senior aides who worked together during President George W. Bush’s administration. The report claims that Peterlin and Hook “have cut career staff out of decision-making in an attempt to combat the sort of leaks that have hobbled the White House – and have isolated Tillerson from some of the people who could help him succeed.”
Tillerson has left open hundreds of senior posts in the State Department that require appointment by the president, and according to POLITICO sources, the secretary of state is “in no rush” to fill them. Instead, some of those vacated seats are currently occupied by “holdovers” from President Barack Obama’s administration in spite of “criticism from department veterans.”
The two aides act a joint firewall and policy machine for Secretary Tillerson, who has a department of more than 75,000 employees at his disposal. Peterlin, according to the report, is Tillerson’s “gatekeeper” who fields calls even from former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, and Hook is the “policy brain” that crafts foreign policy briefing memos for the secretary. Because they are so overworked, the latter has been described as always having his “hair on fire.”
Beyond overwhelming the two staffers doing the work of thousands of employees, the “bottleneck” effect of Tillerson’s State Department has “led foreign governments to seek out other avenues of communication.” According to the report, the lack of Trump-appointed ambassadors has caused some foreign leaders to “reaching out directly to Hook or to other White House officials including Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.”