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US President-elect Donald Trump's national security transition has been more chaotic than others in recent memory, with important positions unfilled and many of his people less able, or willing, to engage on substance, US officials said.
The uncertainties surrounding Trump's personnel, policies, and rise to power have rattled many of America's allies, including Japan, Germany and Britain, at a time when China is more assertive, Russia more aggressive, terrorism more diffuse, West Asia still unstable and North Korea nuclear-armed and unpredictable, US and foreign diplomats said.
Disruption and uncertainty can provide strategic advantages, Mark Lagon and Ross Harrison of Georgetown University wrote in Foreign Policy magazine.
Top Trump officials, however, described the transition as having gone smoothly, including on national security.
Republican Trump's camp announced on Thursday it had asked more than 50 of Democrat Obama's appointees to stay on. However, at least three officials, a senior intelligence officer and two diplomats whose names are on a list of "requested political holdovers," will depart.
The two diplomats have told colleagues they are going, and O'Sullivan is keeping her long-standing plans to retire. A US official said that Nuland was never asked by the transition to stay on and was unaware of her name appearing on such a list.
The State Department declined comment. The Trump transition and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
"Personnel appointments were far more advanced in both those cases," said the official, who spoke on condition he not be identified. "In both cases, advance teams were working on substance."
During the 2008-2009 transition, the official said, incoming and outgoing officials had worked together on issues "in a very harmonious fashion."
"None of that is the case in this transition," he added.
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Vice President-elect Michael Pence said Trump's transition was being completed ahead of schedule and under budget. “Our job is to be ready on day one. The American people can be confident that we will be.”
Trump spokesperson Sean Spicer also told reporters that contact between the incoming and outgoing National Security Council staffs had been “tremendous”.
Trump's team did not respond to requests for further comment.
Three State Department officials, though, called the transition there "a mess," and said that until recently the Trump team had little contact with department officials and read few if any of their briefing books.
That has left many career officials with misgivings about the incoming administration and the possibility that many foreign policy and national security veterans may be swept out.
A dozen serving officials at four intelligence agencies said they are troubled by Trump's apparent disdain for their work; by his designated national security advisor Michael Flynn's perceived bent for conspiracy theories and hostility toward some of his former colleagues; and by what some say is the incoming president's disinterest in the briefings he has received.
Secretary of State John Kerry and his nominated replacement, Rex Tillerson, were to meet on Thursday, but their schedules did not mesh, State Department spokesman John Kirby told reporters.
One Obama official, who has dealt with the Trump transition team at the State Department and spoke on condition of anonymity, said it appeared 'totally disconnected' from Trump's top echelon of advisers and from Tillerson.
Tillerson's nomination is not expected to get a Senate Foreign Relations Committee vote before Monday at the earliest
(This article has been published in an association with Reuters)
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