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Trump Plans to Nominate Army's Mark Esper as Defense Secretary

Trump Plans to Nominate Army's Mark Esper as Defense Secretary

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump plans to nominate Army Secretary Mark Esper for defense secretary following the messy withdrawal of the president’s previous choice, Acting Secretary Patrick Shanahan.

The White House made the announcement on Friday night.

Esper was already set take over from Shanahan as acting secretary, at 12:01 a.m. Monday, amid heightened tensions between the U.S. and Iran. He faces a vetting and Senate confirmation process that could drag on for weeks if not months. He is scheduled to attend a NATO defense ministers meeting in Brussels next week.

Trump Plans to Nominate Army's Mark Esper as Defense Secretary

Trump signaled his intentions on Tuesday as he announced Shanahan’s departure, saying he would “most likely” nominate Esper as defense secretary and that he could win Senate confirmation “very quickly” because he’s “very experienced.”

Esper, 55, served as an aide to former Senator Bill Frist, a Tennessee Republican, giving him a foundation of experience and relationships on Capitol Hill. He also was an executive with Raytheon Co., which United Technologies Corp. now plans to buy to create an aerospace and defense giant with $74 billion in sales.

Like Shanahan, a former Boeing Co. vice president, Esper would be expected to recuse himself from decisions on contracts involving his former employer.

Iranian Threat

The turmoil at the Defense Department comes as Trump said Friday he had called off retaliatory strikes on three Iranian sites following the shooting down of a U.S. Navy drone, saying the action would not have been “proportionate.” Airstrikes would have raised the specter of a far broader conflict in the volatile region, which supplies one-third of the world’s oil.

Shanahan had been serving in an acting role since former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned in December. But Shanahan took his name out of consideration to formally replace Mattis after reports about domestic violence episodes in his family. Trump, who never sent Shanahan’s nomination to the Senate, later told reporters he learned about the incidents involving Shanahan and his family only on Monday.

Lawmakers have questioned how conflicting allegations of domestic violence between Shanahan and his former wife took so long to surface and weren’t revealed when he was vetted by the White House and the FBI before his confirmation as deputy defense secretary.

The Senate Armed Services Committee recommended Shanahan as deputy secretary and the full Senate confirmed him on a 92-7 vote in 2017.

Despite bipartisan criticism in Congress that Trump lacks a Senate-confirmed defense secretary -- a concern heightened by the tensions with Iran -- Esper is likely to face added scrutiny because of concerns over the vetting of Shananan.

Senator Kevin Cramer, a North Dakota Republican and member of the Armed Services Committee, said in a statement that he was “thankful President Trump is moving quickly to fill this important post.”

Esper, who attended the United States Military Academy at West Point, was in the same class as Secretary of State Michael Pompeo. After graduation, he spent more than a decade on active duty in the Army.

The White House also said on Friday night that Trump intended to nominate David Norquist to be the Pentagon’s deputy secretary. Norquist has been the Defense Department’s undersecretary and comptroller.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Jacobs in Washington at jjacobs68@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Wayne at awayne3@bloomberg.net, Justin Blum, John Harney

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