Tillerson calls reports of White House ouster ‘laughable’


Washington – US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Friday called reports that the White House wants him to resign “laughable,” even as one of his closest aides planned to leave the department, The New York Times reports.

R.C. Hammond, who has served as Tillerson’s personal press aide, is expected to leave his post this month, according to three people in the department with direct knowledge of the situation and who asked for anonymity to discuss personnel issues.

Hammond denied he would be leaving soon, and offered a joke.

“You are not so lucky,” Hammond wrote in an email. “You still get to work with me.”

The White House has a plan to force out Tillerson, whose relationship with President Trump has become increasingly awkward and whose ties with others in the White House are severely strained. He is expected to be succeeded by Mike Pompeo, the CIA director who is more closely aligned with Trump on a series of important foreign policy matters.

In a brief appearance before reporters Friday with Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj of Libya, Tillerson was asked about the White House plan.

“It’s laughable,” he said, and then repeated: “It’s laughable.”

Tillerson has been dogged for months by rumors that he would resign, and for just as long he has dismissed these rumors, even going so far as to hold a news conference in October to say, “There’s never been a consideration in my mind to leave.”

Tillerson, a former chief executive of Exxon Mobil whose personal net worth is measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars, is the object of speculation as to why he would continue to serve a president who so frequently undermines him.

Tillerson intends to slash the State Department’s personnel by 8 percent and its budget by 31 percent. The cuts are needed, he has said many times, because many of the world’s conflicts will soon be resolved, a view that few in the department or in the broader foreign policy community share. Tillerson has made clear he has little use for much of the day-to-day diplomacy conducted by his diplomats.

His plan for the department is expected to be completed by early next year, with its implementation parceled out over 2018.