By Josh Rogin
Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson’s job running the State Department just got considerably
more difficult. The entire senior level of management officials resigned
Wednesday, part of an ongoing mass exodus of senior Foreign Service officers
who don’t want to stick around for the Trump era.
Tillerson was actually inside the State
Department’s headquarters in Foggy Bottom on Wednesday, taking meetings and
getting the lay of the land. I reported Wednesday morning that the Trump team
was narrowing its
search for his No. 2, and
that it was looking to replace the State Department’s long-serving
undersecretary for management, Patrick Kennedy. Kennedy, who has been in that
job for nine years, was actively involved in the transition and was angling to
keep that job under Tillerson, three State Department officials told me.
Then suddenly on Wednesday afternoon, Kennedy and
three of his top officials resigned unexpectedly, four State Department
officials confirmed. Assistant Secretary of State for Administration Joyce Anne
Barr, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Michele Bond and
Ambassador Gentry O. Smith, director of the Office of Foreign Missions,
followed him out the door. All are career Foreign Service officers who have
served under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
Kennedy
will retire from the Foreign Service at the end of the month, officials said.
The other officials could be given assignments elsewhere in the Foreign Service.
In addition, Assistant Secretary of State for
Diplomatic Security Gregory Starr retired Jan. 20, and the director of the
Bureau of Overseas Building Operations, Lydia Muniz, departed the same day.
That amounts to a near-complete housecleaning of all the senior officials that
deal with managing the State Department, its overseas posts and its people.
“It’s the single biggest simultaneous departure of
institutional memory that anyone can remember, and that’s incredibly difficult
to replicate,” said David Wade, who served as State Department chief of staff
under Secretary of State John Kerry. “Department expertise in security,
management, administrative and consular positions in particular are very
difficult to replicate and particularly difficult to find in the private
sector.”
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