Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The Big Winner If Tillerson Is Confirmed As Secretary of State

The Big Winner If Tillerson Is Confirmed As Secretary of State

When president-elect Donald Trump announced he'd chosen Rex Tillerson, the chief executive of Exxon Mobil, to be the next Secretary of State, he praised the business leader as a successful dealmaker who has made profitable deals with foreign countries for the world's largest energy company. In a statement, Trump lauded Tillerson as "a forceful and clear-eyed advocate for America’s vital national interests" who would "help reverse years of misguided foreign policies and actions that have weakened America’s security and standing in the world."


Several Republican establishment figures including former Secretary of State James Baker, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and former Defense Secretary Robert Gates backed Tillerson for the position, according to an official on Trump's transition team. Their support will likely be instrumental in helping Tillerson ride out a confirmation battle in the Senate which would scrutinize the billionaire's stake in Russia's energy industry. Another source on Trump's transition team revealed that Trump judged in making the pick that Tillerson could address questions about his ties to Russia.

Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) voiced his concerns about Tillerson's appointment in an interview with reporters: "I have concerns. It's very well known that he has a very close relationship with Vladimir Putin."

Rex Tillerson and Vladimir Putin. (Credit: Source.)

In fact, Tillerson has had close ties with Putin since he represented Exxon’s interests in Russia during Boris Yeltsin's premiership. He has developed close ties with the Kremlin leadership ever since and has indicated that the country has vast potential as an oil supplier. In 2013, Putin bestowed a state honor. the Order of Friendship, on Tillerson, and cited his work "strengthening cooperation in the energy sector."

According to Robert Weissman, the president of Public Citizen, a public interest group based in Washington, the "chances" that Tillerson "will view Russia with Exxon Mobil DNA are close to 100 percent." Michael T. Klare, a professor at Hampshire College and the author of The Race for What's Left, about the rush for oil in the thawing Arctic, reiterates Weissman's concerns: “In these negotiations, one has to wonder what would influence the types of deals he is making," he said. “Questions arise over whether his actions would be benefiting his company or the interests of the United States and its allies.”

Under Tillerson's leadership, Exxon stood to make an enormous profit drilling in Russia's Arctic region despite U.S. sanctions against Rosneft, its Kremlin-controlled partner. The sanctions, which were in retaliation for Russia's lethal intervention in eastern Ukraine, sent the deal––which Russian officials optimistically projected at $500 billion––grinding to a halt.

Tillerson, who is set to retire next year and, according to company filings, owns $218 million in company stock and has a $70 million pension plan, has openly criticized American policy. At Exxon’s 2014 annual meeting, for example, Tillerson said: “We do not support sanctions, generally, because we don’t find them to be effective unless they are very well implemented comprehensibly, and that’s a very hard thing to do. So we always encourage the people

who are making those decisions to consider the very broad collateral damage of who are they really harming.”

At a 2015 conference in Houston, Tillerson said Exxon looked forward to the sanctions being lifted so Exxon could pursue currently blocked oil projects: “We’ll await a time in which the sanctions environment changes or the sanctions requirements change," he said at the time.

In a statement, Alan Jeffers, an Exxon Mobil spokesman, stressed that Exxon follows the law: “If a law says that a U.S. corporation is not allowed to participate in activities in a particular jurisdiction, that’s what we do," he said.

But Tillerson's critics suggest that Tillerson's appointment will result in major conflicts of interest, blurring already thin lines of diplomacy.

“Exxon has been willing to engage in practices that make it a first-round contender for new Russian assets,” says Robert Amsterdam, a lawyer for the Russian tycoon Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. “The way you do that is coming as close to the line as humanely possible to support the Russians” without breaking the law."

Credit: Source.

Raymond C. Offenheiser, president of anti-poverty organization Oxfam America, said his group questioned how Tillerson would “balance the pressure to transact short-term deals against his larger responsibility to strengthen the rules and institutions that protect economic hope and fundamental human rights for so many on the planet.” He added that under Tillerson's leadership, "Exxon has continued to work to undermine climate science.” (Exxon has continued to deny charges that it knew about the link between fossil burning fuels and climate change before a scientific consensus.)

For his part, Tillerson appeared to be in the good graces of the president-elect even before he confirmed Tillerson would be his ultimate choice. In an interview with Fox News on Sunday, Trump called Tillerson "a world-class player," saying that "he is much more than a business executive."

Speaking in Moscow on Monday, American oil industry consultant Carter Page, who served as Trump's foreign policy adviser during his presidential campaign, congratulated Tillerson, saying he was "excited" about the possibility of private sector business opportunities between Russia and the United States. “What makes me excited about new possibilities is the chance to really work on new things to improve more from a business standpoint,” he said.

More from People/donald-trump

Trump Just Gave A Bonkers Excuse For Why He Shared An AI Image Of Himself As Jesus—And Nobody's Buying It
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Antonio Masiello/Getty Images

Trump Just Gave A Bonkers Excuse For Why He Shared An AI Image Of Himself As Jesus—And Nobody's Buying It

After Pope Leo XVI criticized President Donald Trump's war with Iran, Trump called him "weak" in a post on Truth Social, credited himself for Leo's selection as pope, and even went so far as to post an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ.

Last week, the Pope called on the world "to reject war, especially a war which many people have said is an unjust war, which is continuing to escalate and is not resolving anything."

Keep ReadingShow less
Drew Barrymore reacts during an emotional “Scared to Wear” segment
@thedrewbarrymoreshow/TikTok

Drew Barrymore Gets Emotional Talking About Her Post-Pregnancy Body Insecurities—And Fans Are Applauding Her Candor

In an emotional segment titled “Scared to Wear,” Drew Barrymore opened up about her insecurities with disarming honesty. The actor and host is a mother of two daughters, Olive, 13, and Frankie, 11, whom she shares with ex-husband Will Kopelman.

During a recent episode of The Drew Barrymore Show, Barrymore became visibly emotional while speaking with a viewer undergoing a style makeover after struggling with self-image.

Keep ReadingShow less
NASA Chief Responds To 10-Year-Old's Adorable Letter Asking For Pluto To Be Reclassified As A Planet
RONALDO SCHEMIDT / Contributor/Getty Images; @latestinspace/X

NASA Chief Responds To 10-Year-Old's Adorable Letter Asking For Pluto To Be Reclassified As A Planet

Those of us who were in school prior to 2006 would be able to recite an acronym or saying that lists the order of the planets in our solar system, such as "My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Nine Peaches".

That old saying officially became outdated in 2006, when the final planet in that saying, Pluto, was officially declassified by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), and was thus no longer considered a planet.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sabrina Carpenter
Sabrina Carpenter/YouTube

Fans Defend Sabrina Carpenter Once Again After New Video Sparks Backlash For Being Too 'Sexual'

When it comes to controversy, the heir apparent to "Queen of Pop" Madonna couldn't be clearer: Sabrina Carpenter.

Carpenter has repeatedly been at the center of the exact same angry debates we had four decades ago about Madonna: When a woman is overtly sexual in her work, is she liberating women or shackling them?

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Pope Leo
Radio Genoa

MAGA Melts Down After 'Woke' Pope Leo Urges The World To 'Search Always For Peace'

MAGA followers were not happy with Pope Leo XIV and accused him of being "woke" after he, in remarks to reporters, implored "people of good will" to "search always for peace."

The Pope spoke out after President Donald Trump insisted that God supports his war on Iran and declared—before a provisional ceasefire was announced—that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again" ahead of a deadline to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges that legal scholars and world leaders have said would constitute war crimes.

Keep ReadingShow less