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Esper named new US acting defense secretary after Shanahan withdraws

US Acting Secretary of Defense Patrick M. Shanahan and Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Kevin McAleenan are greeted by the Commander of US Northern Command, Air Force Gen. Terrence O'Shaughnessy upon arrival in McAllen, Texas, to visit the US southern border, May 11, 2019. Image: US Army Sgt. Amber I. Smith/Department of Defense

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday, June 18 his pick for defense secretary, Patrick Shanahan, has withdrawn, leaving the Pentagon without a permanent boss for more than six months just as tensions soar in the Middle East.

Shanahan “has decided not to go forward with his confirmation process so that he can devote more time to his family,” Trump tweeted after Shanahan faced questions over his past personal life and an allegation of domestic violence.

Trump said the army secretary, Mark Esper, will come in as acting secretary of defense.

Esper is a former army officer who served in the U.S.-led 1990-1991 Gulf war to end Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, then became a senior executive at weapons and aerospace company Raytheon. Shanahan had a long career at Boeing’s civil and military divisions before joining the Pentagon.

Update June 18 Later on Tuesday, the Pentagon said in a release that Esper will replace Shanahan as the Acting Secretary of Defense at 00:01 on June 24.

There hasn’t been a full secretary of defense since the resignation of James Mattis in December last year after splits in the administration over Trump’s sudden decision to remove U.S. troops from Syria.

The new upheaval in what is one of the biggest posts in the U.S. government comes amid rising tensions in the Middle East, where the United States has accused Iran of attacking oil tankers in the strategic Gulf of Oman.

The Pentagon has announced another 1,000 troops are to be sent to the region, while U.S. officials say they would launch a war if necessary to stop Iran from pursuing nuclear weapons – something Tehran insists it is not doing.

Shanahan’s nomination has been bogged down in the congressional confirmation process. The last straw appears to have been revelations during an FBI background check of a violent altercation with his then wife in 2010.

In a statement late Monday, Shanahan said it was “painful” to see his past “dredged up and painted in an incomplete and therefore misleading way as a result of this nomination process.”

“I never laid a hand on my then-wife and cooperated fully in a thorough law enforcement investigation that resulted in her being charged with assault against me – charges which I had dropped in the interest of my family,” he said, according to USA Today.


With reporting from AFP

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