President-elect Donald Trump has
tapped ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson to lead the State Department,
dismissing concerns about the businessman's close ties to Russia and
bringing a long public audition process to a conclusion.
Two
people close to Trump's transition team said Monday night that Trump
had selected Tillerson. They insisted on anonymity because they were not
authorized to disclose the pick ahead of that announcement.
Trump
was set to announce his nomination Tuesday morning. The selection could
set him up for a potential fight with Congress over confirming
Tillerson, who has connections with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Leading Republicans have already expressed anxieties about Tillerson, as
they contend with intelligence assessments saying Russia interfered
with the U.S. presidential election to help Trump.
But two meetings with the oil
executive impressed Trump, who called Tillerson a "world class player"
in an interview on "Fox News Sunday."
In
the interview, Trump pointed to Tillerson's deep relations with Moscow
as a selling point. As ExxonMobil's head, he maintained close ties with
Russia and was awarded by President Vladimir Putin with the Order of
Friendship in 2013, an honor for a foreign citizen.
For
weeks, Trump has teased out the decision process publicly, often
exposing rifts in his organization. He also considered former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a one-time vocal Trump critic, and Sen.
Bob Corker of Tennessee, who leads the Foreign Relations Committee.
Romney wrote on Facebook Monday that it "was an honor to have been
considered" for the job.
The
unconventional vetting procedures are in keeping with Trump's
presidential style thus far, unconcerned with tradition or business as
usual. In recent weeks, he's attacked CIA intelligence, spoken to the
leader of Taiwan and has continued his late-night Twitter tirades.
Making
yet another nontraditional choice, Trump heads out Tuesday for another
week of travel, starting with a rally in Wisconsin.
Trump
postponed a Thursday announcement about how he will handle his massive
business empire, though it appears likely he will not follow other
presidents and make a clean break from his personal holdings.
Trump
was set to visit supporters as questions swirled about a CIA assessment
that Russia interfered in the November election on his behalf. Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Monday that Congress will
investigate the agency's conclusion, which the incoming commander in
chief has called "ridiculous."
The
CIA recently concluded with "high confidence" that Russia sought to
influence the U.S. election on behalf of Trump, raising red flags among
lawmakers concerned about the sanctity of the U.S. voting system and
potentially straining relations at the start of Trump's administration.
On
Twitter Monday, Trump pushed back, saying: "Can you imagine if the
election results were the opposite and WE tried to play the Russia/CIA
card. It would be called conspiracy theory!"
Trump
has expressed admiration for Putin. But McConnell said flatly, "The
Russians are not our friends." And House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said
in statement that a House Intelligence Committee probe of cyberthreats
by other countries and terrorist groups "will continue and has my
support."
The White House
embraced the congressional inquiry saying it "is certainly warranted
when you consider the stakes and the consequences."
If
confirmed by the Senate, Tillerson's test will be whether his corporate
deal-making skills translate into the delicate world of international
diplomacy. He would face immediate challenges in Syria, where a civil
war rages on, and in China, given Trump's recent suggestions that he
could take a more aggressive approach to dealing with Beijing.
A
native of Wichita Falls, Texas, Tillerson came to ExxonMobil Corp. as a
production engineer straight out of the University of Texas at Austin
in 1975 and never left. Groomed for an executive position, Tillerson
came up in the rough-and-tumble world of oil production, holding posts
in the company's central United States, Yemen and Russian operations.
Early
in the company's efforts to gain access to the Russian market,
Tillerson cut a deal with state-owned Rosneft. The neglected post-Soviet
company didn't have a tremendous amount to offer, but Exxon partnered
with it "to be on the same side of the table," Tillerson said, according
to "Private Empire," an investigative history of Exxon by Steve Coll.
Tillerson,
who became CEO on Jan. 1, 2006, is expected to retire in 2017.
Tillerson's heir apparent, Darren Woods, was put in place a year ago, so
there would be virtually no additional disruption to Exxon's succession
plans if Tillerson were to become secretary of state.
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