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Shanahan: Trump chooses a business manager for defense chief
By Sylvie LANTEAUME
Washington (AFP) May 9, 2019

Trump taps acting Pentagon chief Shanahan as defense secretary
Washington (AFP) May 9, 2019 - US President Donald Trump plans to nominate acting Pentagon chief Patrick Shanahan as his next secretary of defense, the White House announced Thursday.

The former Boeing executive has been acting secretary for more than four months, since James Mattis resigned in protest over Trump's surprise announcement of a rapid withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan and Syria.

"Based on his outstanding service to the country and his demonstrated ability to lead, President Trump intends to nominate Patrick M. Shanahan to be secretary of defense," a White House statement said.

A politically flexible management professional originally brought to the Pentagon to modernize its trillion-dollar acquisition program, Shanahan said he was happy to accept the nomination.

"I am honored by today's announcement of President Trump's intent to nominate," he said in a statement.

"If confirmed by the Senate, I will continue the aggressive implementation of our National Defense Strategy."

"I remain committed to modernizing the force so our remarkable soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines have everything they need to keep our military lethal and our country safe."

Shanahan, 56, was Mattis's own pick in 2017 to be deputy secretary of defense, overseeing the management of the massive US military bureaucracy.

Before joining the Pentagon, he spent 30 years at Boeing, where he earned the nickname Mr Fix-It for having put the problem-saddled Dreamliner program back on the tracks.

- Confirmation expected -

Since taking the Pentagon's reins on January 1 as acting secretary, he has kept a low profile while bending to Trump's pressure to deploy Defense Department funding and manpower to the southern border to halt the inflow of migrants from Central America.

But he first had to undergo an investigation into allegations that he was a biased advocate for Boeing, especially against rival aerospace company Lockheed Martin, the builder of the F-35 joint strike fighter.

After he was cleared of those allegations two weeks ago, the way was open for Trump's nomination.

Shanahan, who has smoothly handled questioning in several appearances in front of Congress in recent weeks, was expected to face few hurdles in the Senate confirmation process.

The job requires overseeing 2.87 million employees -- soldiers, reservists and civilians -- and managing an annual budget of more than $716 billion.

Democrats though could press him hard on Trump's controversial policies, including his support for the president's border initiatives.

On Thursday he was taken to task for failing to inform Congress last weekend when the administration suddenly toughened its rhetoric against Iran and Shanahan ordered an aircraft carrier task force to head to the Persian Gulf earlier than planned.

"I believe Acting Secretary of Defense Shanahan is a logical choice to become the next Secretary of Defense," said senior Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.

"He has demonstrated to me his detailed understanding that a strong, modern and well-trained military is essential in a dangerous and complex world."

After two years of the battle-hardened and wizened Jim Mattis, President Donald Trump has chosen a flexible business manager to lead the Pentagon and support his anti-immigrant border operations: Patrick Shanahan.

The White House announced Trump's intention to nominate Shanahan on Thursday, after the veteran Boeing engineer spent more than four months as acting secretary of defense -- proving himself to a president who found Mattis, a former marine four-star general, too independent.

His nomination still requires confirmation from the Senate, where his predecessor enjoyed strong support as a crucial check against Trump's most extreme ideas and where there could be doubts about Shanahan's lack of soldiering experience.

But Shanahan, 56, will benefit from having been Mattis's own pick in 2017 to be deputy secretary of defense, overseeing the management of the massive US military.

- Boeing executive -

Before joining the Pentagon, Shanahan spent 30 years at Boeing, where he earned the nickname Mr Fix-It for having put the problem-saddled Dreamliner program back on the tracks.

Mattis tapped Shanahan to bring his management skills to modernize the Pentagon's procedures for its trillion-dollar acquisition program.

But Shanahan quickly drew criticism that he violated Defense Department ethics rules with his support for Boeing as a supplier while denigrating its competitors, notably aerospace company Lockheed Martin, the builder of the F-35 joint strike fighter.

After he was cleared of those allegations two weeks ago, the way was open for Trump's nomination.

Still, the discreet divorced father of three will have a tough job following Mattis, whose deep experience as a battlefield commander and encyclopedic knowledge of military history and strategy awed soldiers in the field.

Mattis resigned in December when Trump abruptly announced he was pulling the US out of Syria, and slashing its troop numbers in Afghanistan.

Both moves, Mattis believed, were strategically bad and he stepped down, saying Trump needed a defense chief whose views were better aligned.

Since taking the position on January 1, Shanahan has mostly stayed out of the public eye and avoided clashing with the White House.

He has never served in the military and is more at home with finances than armed conflict.

Reacting to Trump's decision to nominate him, he said he was "honored."

"If confirmed by the Senate, I will continue the aggressive implementation of our National Defense Strategy."

"I remain committed to modernizing the force so our remarkable soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines have everything they need to keep our military lethal and our country safe."

Shanahan rarely speaks publicly, has yet to hold a formal press conference, and has only traveled abroad once, in February, on a trip to visit US troops in Kabul and Baghdad.

That same trip took him to international meetings in Brussels and Munich, where he appeared somewhat uneasy, given the widespread criticism of Trump's policies.

- Trump 'likes him' -

Shanahan has since taken great care to not rub the president the wrong way, and so far it appears to have paid off.

"I can tell you that the president has a great deal of respect for Acting Defense Secretary Shanahan. He likes him," said White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders recently.

He has gone along with Trump's demand for more Pentagon resources to help police the US border with Mexico and to divert billions of dollars from the Defense Department's budget to finance building a wall on the frontier.

Yet that put Shanahan in the line of fire in Congress, where legislators are none too happy about the diversion of Pentagon funds for the wall, which could impact other already-planned military construction projects.

Quizzed by Congress on whether the diversion will harm military activities, he said: "Military construction on the border will not come at the expense of our people, our readiness, or our modernization. "


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France confirms contested arms shipment to Saudi Arabia
Paris (AFP) May 8, 2019
The French government confirmed Wednesday that a new shipment of weapons will head for Saudi Arabia, despite claims Riyadh is using the arms in the Yemen war. Defence Minister Florence Parly told BFM television the weapons would be loaded onto a Saudi cargo ship scheduled to arrive Wednesday in the French port of Le Havre. She refused to identify the types of arms, but reiterated France's stance that they have been used only for defensive purposes by Saudi Arabia since it began its Yemen offensi ... read more

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