Security adviser post to Vice Admiral Harward Turn Down: White House official

DN Bureau

The Trump administration has offered the job of White House national security adviser, vacated by former U.S. intelligence official Michael Flynn, to Vice Admiral Robert Harward, said two U.S. officials.

Vice Adm. Robert S. Harward, commanding officer of Combined Joint Interagency Task Force 435, Afghanistan
Vice Adm. Robert S. Harward, commanding officer of Combined Joint Interagency Task Force 435, Afghanistan


 

Washington: Robert S. Harward, the retired vice admiral and former Navy SEAL who was President Donald Trump's top choice as national security advisor, has turned down the post.

"This job requires 24 hours a day, seven days a week focus and commitment to do it right. I currently could not make that commitment," the New York Times quoted Harward as saying.

 

He added that he had "the opportunity to address financial and family issues that would have been challenging in this position" for the first time, since retiring from a 40-year military career.

 

Two senior administration officials also confirmed that Harward cited family and financial considerations in turning down the post.

 

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Earlier, Trump's national security advisor Michael Flynn resigned over controversy about his Russian ties. The resignation was quickly followed by the abrupt withdrawal of Andrew Puzder.

 

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But by then, Harward, who is a top executive at Lockheed Martin, had decided he was not willing to take the post. He wrote to Trump and Mattis conveying his decision, two of the officials said.

 

Trump's National Security Council has been embroiled in political controversy. In an executive order last month, which Trump later complained privately that he had not been fully briefed on, the president placed Stephen K. Bannon, his chief strategist, on its principals committee, giving a political advisor a position of parity with the secretaries of state and defence and with the national security adviser.

 

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Two former national security officials, who have worked closely with Harward, said he would have been unlikely to take the position without assurances from Trump that he could run the N.S.C. free of intervention by political advisors. They also spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak about the matter.

 

Harward's withdrawal from consideration prompted David H. Petraeus, the former general and director of the Central Intelligence Agency, to step up his lobbying for the post, according to officials familiar with the process. (With ANI Inputs)

 










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