US defence chief Mattis says Trump is ‘100 percent’ with him

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HO CHI MINH CITY, Oct 16, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
said President Donald Trump has assured him of his full support, one day
after Trump appeared to cast doubt over the Pentagon chief’s fate.

Speaking to reporters as he flew from Washington to Ho Chi Minh City at the
start of a diplomatic tour that will take him to Vietnam and Singapore,
Mattis said he had spoken directly to Trump by phone late Monday morning
Washington time.

“He said, ‘I’m 100 percent with you’,” Mattis said.

His remark comes after US broadcaster CBS on Sunday aired an interview with
Trump, in which he suggested Mattis may be headed out the Pentagon door.

“It could be that he is. I think he’s sort of a Democrat, if you want to
know the truth,” Trump said.

“But General Mattis is a good guy. We get along very well. He may leave. I
mean, at some point, everybody leaves.”

Earlier on in the 20-hour flight to Vietnam — before he’d spoken to Trump,
who himself was flying on Air Force One to Florida — Mattis was asked what
he’d made of Trump’s comments.

“Nothing at all,” Mattis said. “I’m on his team. We have never talked about
me leaving. And as you can see right here, we are on our way, we just
continue doing our job… no problem.”

He added that he had never registered with any political party, and that
those in the military are “proudly apolitical”.

– Cabinet reshuffle –

Mattis’s fate has been the subject of intense speculation for months.

It reached fever pitch in September, when veteran journalist Bob Woodward
published a book giving an inside glimpse into a chaotic White House and said
Mattis had questioned Trump’s judgment, likening his understanding to that of
a 10- or 11-year-old child.

Mattis, a buttoned-up former Marine Corps general, is loath to discuss
politics or his relationship with Trump, and the president is widely reported
to bristle at unfavourable comparisons to Mattis, who has broad bipartisan
support.

The Woodward book details a number of times Mattis or Trump officials are
said to have slow-walked orders from the president, such as in the aftermath
of Trump’s tweets last year that said all transgender personnel would be
banned from the military.

Trump is looking to reshape his cabinet after the mid-term elections, which
will determine whether the Democrats can regain some degree of power after a
total and humiliating defeat in 2016.

The president has already cast off many of his original top-level picks,
including former secretary of state Rex Tillerson and Lieutenant General HR
McMaster, who had been national security advisor.

Last week, his ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, announced her
resignation, effective at the end of the year.

– China strains –

Speculation of Mattis’s future in the Trump administration loomed over his
arrival Tuesday in Ho Chi Minh City for a week-long trip likely to be
dominated by escalating tensions between Washington and Beijing over a roster
of issues.

En route to Vietnam, Mattis blasted China’s increasingly muscular military
presence in the South China Sea and “predatory economic practices” towards
smaller countries in Asia.

But after weeks of worsening military-to-military strains with China as a
trade war with the US slogs on, Mattis said Washington was not trying to hold
back its Pacific rival.

“Obviously, we’re not out to contain China,” he told reporters. “We’d have
taken an altogether different stance had that been considered.”

The defence chief’s Asia trip initially included a leg in Beijing, but that
fell through after China declined to make Mattis’s counterpart available for
him to meet.

Mattis’s trip to Vietnam is his second to the country after his visit to
Hanoi in January.

Such visits by US defense secretaries have until now been exceedingly rare,
and Mattis’s presence strongly signals the importance Washington sees in
further enhancing ties with a former foe amid rising tensions with China.