The State Department isn’t dealing with China. Jared Kushner is

Authored by salon.com and submitted by dont_tread_on_dc
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Although it emerged as recently as last month that President Donald Trump had granted considerable foreign policy power to his son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, it now appears that the former real estate tycoon has emerged as China’s point man when it comes to wheeling and dealing with the president.

The relationship began when Chinese ambassador Cui Tiankai started cultivating a relationship with Kushner in early February, according to The New York Times. At that time Kushner and Cui arranged for a phone call between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss America’s commitment to the “One China” policy, among other topics. Since then Cui has also invited Kushner and his family to a Lunar New Year reception at the Chinese embassy, given him proposals to relay to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and worked with Kushner to arrange the meeting between Trump and Xi at Mar-a-Lago later this week.

Kushner’s clout has reached the point where, during a March meeting in the Situation Room, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr. , chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, almost had to sit away from the table until Kushner voluntarily gave up his seat.

This isn’t to say that everyone in the White House has necessarily appreciated Kushner’s occasional gestures of magnanimity. Many White House staffers have grown to resent Kushner’s growing influence, even passing around an article from The Onion that took shots at him for seemingly being in over his head, according to a report by Politico. Currently Kushner’s White House portfolio has been incredibly diverse: It includes leading a “SWAT team” of business leaders to find creative new approaches to governing, trying to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian crisis and serving as a point of contact for a number of foreign governments and officials during the Trump administration’s transition period. He has in general served as an all-purpose adviser to his father-in-law.

JoeFoot on April 3rd, 2017 at 14:06 UTC »

How is Jared qualified to be a diplomat? Did he receive any formal training? Is he just using his "expertise" as a businessman? Don't these people understand that diplomacy is about extracting value while ensuring a long term (+20 years) relationship with a foreign power? You are literally eliminating DECADES of work in foreign policy with your amateur hockey-mom attitude of "how hard can it be?". You are making us the laughing stock of the ENTIRE world.

tomdarch on April 3rd, 2017 at 13:57 UTC »

China is a huge market. Having some professional diplomats dealing with the nation isn't going to get you personal connections to do deals. The State Department there aren't going to negotiate those personal business deals. Your son-in-law will.

This isn't so much the style of a monarchy as it is the pattern we've seen over and over in the 3rd world. "Dad" takes power, then the relatives, particularly the children, run businesses that are theoretically separate from the actual government, when, obviously they are connected and doing a deal with the relative's business gets you official action by the government. Trevor Noah called it very early on: Trump doesn't want to be President of the United States of America, he wants to be a wildly corrupt African dictator "President."

bloatedplutocrat on April 3rd, 2017 at 13:00 UTC »

Oh, so his son-in-law being the Secretary of State over Rex Tillerson is what he was using http://i.imgur.com/kvlCNdt.png to distract with today.

On a side note I like how he said "Answers" not "Questions" like debates are a pop quiz or something.

edit Sorry I may be wrong. He might not be trying to distract anyone but just wanted to have a lazy Monday morning watching TV after a busy weekend of golfing http://i.imgur.com/Ay06HD6.jpg ¯\_(ツ)_/¯