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Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State Department

Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State Department

Yahoo12-07-2025
More than 1,300 employees were forced out of the State Department on Friday, leaving their offices with small boxes of plants and old coffee mugs and taking with them decades of specialized skills and on-the-job training as part of the United States diplomatic corps.
The massive overhaul of the federal agency has been in the works for months, with the Trump administration informing Congress in late May that thousands of State Department employees would lose their jobs as part of the largest reorganization of the department in decades.
Still, the details of whose jobs would be cut remained closely held, and many were shocked to find they were a part of the 15% cut to domestic agency staff. Several career employees who unexpectedly found themselves with pink slips told NBC News they were asked to write speeches and prepare talking points for political appointees on critical issues just days before.
'It's so hard to work somewhere your entire life and then get treated this way,' one veteran civil servant with more than 30 years working at the department told NBC News. 'I don't know how you treat people this way. I really don't.'
As the termination notices hit inboxes throughout the day, employees could be seen crying in the courtyard and huddling in corners in the hallways, as those who had been laid off lined up to hand in their laptops, phones and diplomatic passports.
'The manner in which things were done … they were not done with dignity. They were not done respectfully. They were not done transparently,' Olga Bashbush, a laid-off foreign service officer with more than 20 years of experience, told NBC News.
A senior State Department official briefing reporters on behalf of the agency ahead of the cuts told reporters Thursday that the restructuring was intended to be 'individual agnostic.'
'This is the most complicated personnel reorganization that the federal government has ever undertaken,' the official said. 'And it was done so in order to be very focused on looking at the functions that we want to eliminate or consolidate, rather than looking at individuals.'
Michael Duffin, a civil service employee with the department since 2013, spent nine years as a policy adviser with the counterterrorism bureau developing some of the first programs to counter white supremacy and other forms of violent extremism.
'No one at the State Department would disagree with the need for reform, but arbitrarily laying off people like me and others, irrespective of their performance, is not the right way to do it,' Duffin said as the closing speaker at a rally outside the department late Friday.
A general notice was sent to foreign service officers Friday announcing the reduction in force. It said the department is 'streamlining domestic operations to focus on diplomatic priorities.'
'Headcount reductions have been carefully tailored to affect non-core functions, duplicative or redundant offices, and offices where considerable efficiencies may be found from centralization or consolidation of functions and responsibilities,' the notice obtained by NBC News said.
A State Department website was also set up with a list of links and documents for affected employees with categories like 'retirement sources' and 'Federal Employee Retirement System,' but several fired employees leaving the department Friday expressed confusion and frustration to NBC News about the lack of available information on next steps.
'Yes, there was a congressional notification sent out, but the information that employees have received is literally nothing,' Bashbush said.
Impacted foreign service officers will be placed on administrative leave for 120 days, according to the notice, while most civil servants will have 60 days before being formally terminated from their positions.
By late Friday afternoon, hundreds of civil servants and foreign service officers whose numbers had not been called gathered in the front lobby to 'clap out' their less fortunate colleagues, in a tradition generally reserved for honoring departing secretaries of state.
Diplomats wheeling out boxes stacked on office chairs and cradling grocery bags stuffed with books wiped away tears amid echoing rounds of applause and shouts of support that lasted for nearly two hours.
Bashbush said the solidarity and collegiality filled her heart with gratitude and joy, and she thanked her colleagues for the extraordinary act.
'They clapped us out,' Bashbush said. 'Everybody came here in front of the main State Department building and celebrated everybody's service and their pride in their country.'
The long lines of applause spilled onto the front step outside of the building, where dozens of former career and political diplomats stood among other demonstrators with signs reading, 'Thank you America's diplomats.'
'Our entire office is just ... gone,' said a senior civil service officer from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor standing in front of the department late Friday as fired employees left the building. He spoke anonymously as one of the more than 1,500 State Department employees who have chosen to take deferred retirement.
The employee described the devastation felt by his colleagues, including one who is just about to have a baby and another who provides the sole income for their household.
'That's just on the personal side. I'm not even talking yet about the way this is going to disrupt foreign policy,' he said.
Under the new structure of the State Department, the DRL bureau will be greatly reduced and the few remaining offices will be placed under a new deputy assistant secretary for democracy and Western values. One of the more acute changes will be the elimination of the many dedicated human rights positions for different regions of the world.
'There are specialties. You had a cadre of people that were experts at good governance and human rights and international labor affairs,' the DRL official said. 'You can't have a group of people that don't know the region trying to make human rights policy for that specific region, because they won't get it and they won't advocate for it when more important issues come into play.'
Enrique Roig, a former deputy assistant secretary in the DRL bureau, said he agreed. Roig, who served in the Biden administration, was one of a handful of former democratic political appointees speaking in front of the department as diplomats filed out.
'It will allow authoritarians around the globe, both on the left and the right, to continue to abuse civic space, to jail and to lock up journalists and civic activists and increase the number of political prisoners we see around the world that my bureau was helping to release,' Roig said.
A group of women laid off from the State Department's Office of Science and Technology Cooperation walked out wearing T-shirts over their office clothes with the message, 'Science is Diplomacy. Diplomacy is Science.' The women cried and hugged each other as they exited the building in front of the gathered crowd. Their office is one of over 300 offices or bureaus being eliminated or merged under the sweeping reorganization.
'What's clear is that the Department of State doesn't care about science and research,' said one of the women, a foreign service officer who was laid off from the office as part of the cuts.
She described the office as having some of the best emerging tech professionals 'in whole of government, not just in the Department of State,' and called it a travesty that the talent would be lost.
'When it comes to supporting research, basic research, the research that helps us have things like iPhones, have pacemakers, we have no expertise in this building right now because of the layoffs of our staff and other offices like ours,' she said, adding that they had just found out the officials who they thought would be taking over their important work had also been laid off. 'It's shocking, and it's baffling that the government doesn't seem to care about keeping that kind of expertise.'
'Diplomacy is not a short-term gain. It's a long-term gain,' another laid-off official from the office said, summing up the damage caused by the cuts. 'The connections we make now in our youth are with those officials who will be world leaders one day. Now those connections will be lost.'
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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Trump wants to talk business with Africa in hopes of countering China. But a US summit excluded Africa's big players
Trump wants to talk business with Africa in hopes of countering China. But a US summit excluded Africa's big players

CNN

time11 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump wants to talk business with Africa in hopes of countering China. But a US summit excluded Africa's big players

The White House hosted an 'African leaders' summit of sorts this week. But only five countries from the continent of more than 50 nations were welcome to join. US President Donald Trump hosted a working lunch in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, bringing together the presidents of Mauritania, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Senegal, and Gabon for a discussion focused on 'commercial opportunities,' a White House official told CNN. 'This discussion and lunch dialog with African heads of state was arranged because President Trump believes that African countries offer incredible commercial opportunities which benefit both the American people and our African partners,' the White House official said. The multilateral lunch is scheduled for noon in the State Dining Room of the White House. Going into the meeting, Liberia said that the 'high-level summit' intends 'to deepen diplomatic ties, advance shared economic goals, and enhance security cooperation' between Washington and 'select African nations.' However, none of Africa's big players, such as its largest economies South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Ethiopia, were asked to attend. These nations are allied to BRICS, a group of emerging economies founded by Brazil, India, and America's adversaries, Russia and China. BRICS members face the threat of being hit with new tariffs from Trump for supporting 'anti-American' policies. During the meeting, the five African leaders heaped praise on Trump as they encouraged him to invest in their countries and develop their plentiful natural resources. The leaders joined the US president for lunch in the State Dining Room, where each leader went around the table thanking Trump for his invitation. 'I didn't know I'd be treated this nicely. This is great. We could do this all day long,' Trump said in response to the flattery. Christopher Afoke Isike, a professor of African politics and international relations at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, describes Trump's handpicked guests for his US summit as 'low-hanging fruit' in his quest to counter Chinese and Russian influence in Africa. 'On one hand, Trump is desperate for some deal to show to his base that he is getting results for America. But some of these also align with his focus on countering Chinese influence in Africa and malign Russian activity which undermines US interests on the continent,' he told CNN. 'Most of the regional powers in Africa are either in BRICS as key members or are aspiring to join as key partners,' Isike said, adding that 'these five countries (attending the US summit) do not fall into that category and as such are a kind of low-hanging fruit.' China is Africa's largest bilateral trading partner while its ally Russia has expanded its footprint on the continent, emerging as a major supplier of military hardware. This is not the first time Trump has hosted a small group of African leaders in the US, deviating from the approach of Barack Obama and Joe Biden, who hosted fuller gatherings of African heads of government while in the White House. During his first term in office — viewed by some as 'dismissive toward Africa' — Trump hosted a 'working lunch' in 2017 with nine African heads of state, whom he described as 'partners for promoting prosperity and peace on a range of economic, humanitarian, and security issues.' 'Africa has tremendous business potential,' Trump said in that meeting, which included the leaders of Nigeria, Ethiopia, and South Africa. Now in his second term, Trump has kept an eye on Africa's mineral wealth, with the US keen to challenge China's access to critical minerals in the region. However, he advocates a transactional policy that swaps charity for strategic US investment. When a peace deal brokered by Trump was signed last month by Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which harbors large deposits of minerals critical to the production of electronics, Trump told reporters that the accord allows the US to get 'a lot of the mineral rights from the Congo.' While the signed peace agreement does not specifically forfeit any mineral rights to the US, the document includes a framework 'to expand foreign trade and investment derived from regional critical mineral supply chains,' specifically to 'link both countries, in partnership, as appropriate, with the US government and US investors.' In a statement July 1, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio hailed the end of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which delivered US humanitarian aid overseas, saying that 'the countries that benefit the most from our generosity usually fail to reciprocate' and that future US aid and investment 'must be in furtherance of an America First foreign policy.' The Trump administration had previously canceled more than 80% of programs at USAID and has imposed 'reciprocal' tariffs on several countries, including many in Africa which Trump said had trade deficits with the US. South Africa has described the 'reciprocal' tariff which is due to take effect on August 1 as not based on 'an accurate representation of available trade data.' Trump has also banned travel for 12 mostly African and Middle Eastern nations – citing security risks – amid an aggressive clampdown on immigration by his administration. A mooted expansion of the travel restrictions would halt travel to the US for swathes of West Africa, if implemented. China, meanwhile, is softening the impact of US tariffs on Africa, announcing last month it would halt charges on imports for nearly all its African partners, except Eswatini (formerly Swaziland) which is friendly toward Taiwan — which China's ruling Communist Party claims as its own, despite never having controlled it. Although small economies, Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Senegal and Liberia are rich in mineral resources including oil and gas, gold, iron ore, and rare earth elements. At the White House meeting, Gabon's President Brice Oligui Nguema underscored the mineral wealth of their countries and encouraged the US to partner with them to develop their resources. 'We are not poor countries. We are rich countries when it comes to raw materials. But we need partners to support us and help us develop those resources with win-win partnerships,' he said. Nguema also pushed Trump to purchase from Gabon rather than through companies. 'I'm sure that it's more expensive compared to when you can come and buy directly from us,' he said. Discussions at the Trump-hosted summit extended beyond commerce. Nguema addressed his country's efforts to curb piracy in the Gulf of Guinea. 'We can't do it alone. We need a reliable and strong partner that is committed and that takes real action,' he added. The West and Central African nations are also a common departure point for would-be migrants to the US. 'There may be other stakes: migratory trends from West Africa to Nicaragua and then the US,' as well as 'security, as all of those (five) countries have an opening on the Atlantic Ocean,' Ousmane Sene, who heads the Senegal-based research organization, the West African Research Center (WARC), told CNN. Last year, the New York Times reported, citing government data, that the US was seeing an increasing number of African migrants at its southern border — rising from just over 13,000 in 2022 to 58,462 in 2023. Nationals from Mauritania and Senegal were top of the list, the report said. For Dakar-based journalist and political analyst Mamadou Thior, who covered the first US–Africa Leaders' Summit hosted by Obama in 2014, the leaders of the five African nations must 'be as clever as Donald Trump' in talks with the White House. 'Trump is a businessman. So only the interests of America interest him,' Thior said. 'The USAID, which was a key partner for countries like Senegal, no longer exists. It's up to them to talk to Trump, to see what new cooperation they can put forward.' In Isike's view, 'this meeting is going to inaugurate a new US diplomatic model — one that is transactionally tied to economic reform (and) trade outcomes for the US.' Nonetheless, the five African nations 'can expect to leverage private sector partnerships, investment, infrastructural development, and security cooperation with the US,' he said. These nations are not new to high-stakes relations with global powers. They have each been courted by China, which has boosted trade volumes between them and funded infrastructure in Gabon and Senegal. When Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embaló met his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing in September, the former had kind words for the host nation. 'For Africa,' Embaló said, according to a statement by Chinese foreign ministry, 'China represents the future and is a brother.' 'Guinea-Bissau is willing to be a trustworthy friend and partner of China,' he added. Last month, Senegalese Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko was also full of praise for China, thanking it for awarding dozens 'of preparation scholarships' to his nation's athletes and coaches ahead of next year's Summer Youth Olympics. In the same statement, Sonko expressed frustration with the US decision to deny visas to 'several members of the Senegal women's national basketball team' — a leading force in African women's basketball — forcing them to cancel a training camp they had scheduled in the US. With a wider African leaders' summit mooted by the White House for later in the year, Trump has made one thing clear, according to Isike: an urgent shift 'from traditional aid to strategic commerce-driven engagement.' However, the shift is 'a high-stakes gamble that aligns with America's goal to reset its influence in Africa through investment but also to counter China and foster economically self-reliant African partners,' Isike added. 'Enabling Africa to be self-reliant is not because he (Trump) loves Africa, but because he doesn't have patience with countries that only want handouts from the US,' Isike said, adding that 'these trade deals and the meeting (this week) aligns with the US' priority to favor countries that are able to help themselves.' CNN's Alejandra Jaramillo contributed to this report.

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