President-elect Donald Trump has offered
the influential post of national security adviser to his controversial
campaign adviser, former general Michael Flynn, US media reported Trump
officials as saying Thursday.
Highly respected as a decorated military
intelligence officer helping combat insurgent networks in Afghanistan
and Iraq, Flynn, 57, later generated widespread criticism for his
strident backing of the Republican’s campaign.
He served as Trump’s leading adviser on
national security issues during the campaign and was a highly visible
surrogate, with a hardline stance on radical Islam.
It was not immediately clear whether
Flynn had accepted the offer to become what many believe to be the
country’s top national security official.
As national security adviser, he would
provide one of the most influential voices on foreign policy as well as
some of the most pressing security issues facing the country, including
the battle against the Islamic State group, China’s rising challenge in
the South China Sea and elsewhere, and opposition from Russia.
His role would probably be even more
influential than his predecessors’ thanks to Trump’s near-total lack of
experience in national security matters. Flynn would serve as the
administration’s main contact with the Pentagon, State Department and
intelligence agencies, overseeing a staff of around 400 people.
He left the military after President
Barack Obama fired him from his post as head of the Defense Intelligence
Agency in 2014 following complaints about his leadership style.
He became a vocal critic of Obama’s,
blaming his sacking on the administration’s unwillingness to listen to
his warnings about the threat from radical Islam.
He prompted criticism for his view that
Islamist militants pose global civilization an existential threat,
saying the world has fallen into a struggle between “centrist
nationalists” and “socialists,” The Washington Post reported.
Such views are close to those of Trump,
who has called for banning all Muslim visitors to the United States and
advocated that Muslims in the United States be registered, subjected to
loyalty tests and even deported.
Such views, and others including his denunciation of the war in Iraq, have alienated many of his former military colleagues.
As Trump’s campaign adviser, Flynn led
chants of “Lock her up!” against Hillary Clinton during campaign rallies
and fired off numerous tweets excoriating the Democratic candidate. He
apologized for one that appeared to be anti-Semitic.
Flynn’s refusal to reject Trump’s
support for waterboarding and other torture against suspects, as well as
his call to kill extremists’ family members have helped generate more
opposition to his appointment.
He was also criticized for traveling to
Moscow last year, when he sat next to Russian President Vladimir Putin
at a gala for the state-run television propaganda channel RT, a trip for
which he was paid, The Washington Post reported.
However, the controversy surrounding
Flynn’s possible appointment may matter little to Trump because it would
not require confirmation in the Senate, unlike other key cabinet posts.
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