It’s no secret that former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, throughout his troubled tenure in Donald Trump’s cabinet, found himself marginalized and ignored. What we didn’t know is the extent to which Jared Kushner, the president’s young son-in-law, circumvented the nation’s chief diplomat to pursue his own foreign policy.
President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner held frequent talks with Saudi Arabia’s crown prince and other foreign government officials without briefing or informing senior U.S. diplomats about his discussions, former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told lawmakers in testimony released Thursday.
Tillerson recounted his experience in the top diplomatic job at a closed-door hearing with the House Foreign Affairs Committee last month and the transcript was released to NBC News and other media Thursday.
Tillerson, fired last year by Trump, said he was sometimes caught off guard by Kushner’s talks with foreign officials. In one case, Tillerson said he was dining at a restaurant in Washington when the owner of the restaurant told him Mexico’s foreign minister was seated at another table.
Apparently, the Mexican foreign minister “was operating on the assumption that everything he was talking to Mr. Kushner about had been run through the State Department and that I was fully on board with it.” The Mexican official was “rather shocked” to learn that the things Kushner had said were totally new to the sitting U.S. secretary of State.
Worse, this wasn’t an isolated example. Tillerson also addressed Kushner’s efforts with Saudi Arabia, which operated largely outside the proper channels. As the former cabinet secretary put it, the presidential son-in-law “was in charge of his own agenda,” and there was “typically not a lot of coordination” between Kushner and the U.S. embassy.









