Huntsman Expected to Bring Bipartisan Support to Post as Ambassador to Russia
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AP Photo/ Matt Rourke
New
US Ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman has worked for both Republican and
Democratic presidents and won the respect and trust of legislators from
both parties in Congress so is expected to bring a non-ideological
approach to the position, analysts told Sputnik.
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AFP 2017/ PAUL J. RICHARDS
Huntsman has served in every US presidential administration since Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s and was CEO of his family-owned Huntsman Corporation.
"Huntsman is very credible choice for the
post," Eurasian Business Coalition Vice President Ralph Winnie told
Sputnik on Friday. "He has mutual respect on both sides of the aisle."
Huntsman served as a White House staff assistant for Reagan then
became Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce and US Ambassador
to Singapore under Reagan’s Republican successor President George H.W.
Bush.In a career of national prominence lasting more than three and a half decades, Huntsman had compiled a spotless record of personal trust and integrity, Winnie stated.
"No scandals and very knowledgeable about international affairs," he said
Huntsman’s record included negotiating China’s entry into the World
Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001 and serving as President Barack Obama’s
ambassador to Beijing, Winnie recalled.Huntsman is a Republican moderate and pragmatist who will work hard to develop good relations between Washington and Moscow, Winnie explained.
"He has the ability to negotiate effectively," he said.
HUNTSMAN BUSINESS EXPERIENCE SEEN AS POSITIVE FACTOR
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AP Photo/ Matt Rourke
"Is it so unusual to have a business leader
appointed as an Ambassador? I think not, and he has already served
in that capacity," he said.
Friedman explained that independent wealth often meant a diplomat was
more independent and secure and less likely to be swayed by issues
of personal profit in his professional duties.
"You don't want someone of modest means and hungry who would perhaps be even more vulnerable to influence," he said.
Allegations that Huntsman might face conflict of issues criticism
because of his previous business dealings in Russia did not appear to be
a serious problem for his confirmation by the Senate, Friedman noted.
"I don't know if you can ever 100 percent prove
the absence of a conflict of interest. You could have assets put in a
blind trust, but informal understandings might be reached that reward a
person later," he remarked.
While Huntsman was expected to play a constructive role in setting a
positive tone in personal diplomacy with Russian officials, the
structure of the US government meant he was not likely to be a decisive
figure in setting policy toward the Kremlin, Freidman cautioned.
"The Ambassador does not usually make policy
between countries: More likely an Ambassador would not have the
resources of the National Security Council and the Secretaries of State
and Defense when it comes to critical information to advise the
President," he noted.
US ambassadors had made a much greater difference in shaping policies
towards major powers decades ago before the vast expansion of the
National Security Council’s centralizing bureaucracy and the State
Department’s increasing micro-management of diplomatic activities,
Friedman recalled.
"Maybe Averill Harriman [US ambassador to the
United Kingdom and the Soviet Union during World War II] But Ambassadors
making a critical difference in shaping policies? Increasingly rare,"
he said
However, Huntsman’s extensive diplomatic and business experience
meant he was likely to already enjoy an extended circle of friends and
contacts in Moscow that could make him far more effective as a
bridge-builder between the two governments, Friedman pointed out."To convey useful information it would help to build up some trustworthy high-level connections so the fact that he has had some business operations in Russia before may even be a plus," he suggested.
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