Trump’s evolving foreign policy challenges top US diplomat
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — If Mike Pompeo was surprised, he didn’t show it. But the secretary of state had woken up in the capital of Saudi Arabia on Monday to find that President Donald Trump had tweeted a threat to NATO ally Turkey warning of economic harm should the Turks attack U.S.-backed rebel forces in Syria.
On the second-to-last stop of a Mideast tour dominated by questions and concerns from Arab leaders about Trump’s abrupt order to withdraw American troops from Syria, Pompeo had to refer reporters’ questions about the tweet to the White House. He said he assumed Trump was referring to the possibility of economic sanctions on Turkey if the Kurds were hit. But he couldn’t speak definitively to the matter.
“We apply sanctions in many places around the world,” Pompeo said, attempting to clarify Trump’s threat. “I assume he’s speaking about those kinds of things but you would have to ask him.”
The scene at the news conference at the Riyadh airport played out amid what have become frequent unpleasant surprises for Trump administration officials trying to explain the policies of a president who often issues seemingly impulsive tweets and makes off-the-cuff comments that can disrupt the normal course of diplomacy.