The appointment of Secretary of State Marco Rubio as an interim National Security Advisor places him in an exclusive company as the first official to have both titles from Henry Kissinger in the 1970s.
President Donald Trump announced Thursday that Rubio would be an interim national security advisor, since Mike Waltz, who was the national security advisor, for the United States ambassador to the United Nations.
Rubio uses several other hats in the administration, which he also serves as an interim administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the archivist in the United States.
LOOK – RUBIO SLAMS JUDGES TO TRY A foreign policy about President Trump:
No Secretary of State has served simultaneously in the National Security Advisor post from Kissinger, who did it from September 1973 to November 1975. Kissinger served as National Security Advisor for the Administration of Nixon and in the Ford Administration from January 1969, until, through 1969, to 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, 1969, until, until, until, until, until, until, until, until, until, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969, until 1969. September 23, 1973, and remained on paper until the beginning of the Carter administration.
Months before assuming the role of Secretary of State in 1973, Kissinger negotiated a high fire in the Vietnam War, which led him and the North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc, although the Nobel Peace Prize.
“There is no other comparable honor. The final test of a statesman, after all, is if he has made a contribution to the well -being of humanity,” Kissinger wrote a bad year later.
Like Kissinger, Rubio and the Trump administration, they seek to cause a high heat in the Russia-Ukraine war. Simultaneously, he and the foreign policy team are working to achieve peace in the Middle East and remain attentive to China.
Rubio joined Sean Hannity of Fox News on Thursday, shortly after being appointed National Security Advisor, to discuss the latest developments between Russia and Ukraine, noting that although the parties have Goths closer, they remain separated. “
“Look, we have Goths closer … for the first time, you know, we house this for three years, we are going to children or we can see what would be needed so that Ukraine stops. We can see that it would be needed so that the Russians stop a small position.
Rubio also pointed out that at one point the president has to make a decision on how much energy to spend on the matter if the parties are not close enough for an agreement, so special when there are great issues of foreign policy that stands:
We are not going to give up it in the sense that we will not be ready to help if we can. But there is a point where the president has to decide how much more time at the highest levels of our government dedicates it when perhaps one of the two sides or both are not close enough when we have so many, I would say that they are even more important problems worldwide. It is not that a war in Ukraine is not important, but I would say that what is happening with China is more important in the long term for the future of the world. Obviously, Iran’s nuclear ambition, you know, all these other things we have. So, at some point, it must be some that may happen or we will have to move on. That will be a decision that the president will have to take.
Rubio then added: “You will take a real advance here very soon to do this possible.”