President Trump’s embattled national security adviser Michael Flynn
resigned Monday night and three names have emerged as possible
replacements.
Vice Adm. Bob Harward is one name that has come up to
replace Flynn as national security adviser, and the leading candidate
to get the job, a senior official told Fox News.
Harward is a U.S. Navy SEAL, but also has a previous
relationship with Secretary of Defense James Mattis. Harward was the
deputy commander of the U.S. Central Command under Mattis and was also
the deputy commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command.
He also served on the National Security Council for
President George W. Bush and commissioned the National Counter Terrorism
Center.
TRUMP’S NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER MICHAEL FLYNN RESIGNS
White House sources described Harward as the “toughest guy in the SEALs” and a “real rock.”
A senior administration official added that if Howard
is the choice to replace Flynn, he could be in place by the end of the
week.
Lt. Gen. Joseph Keith Kellogg, Jr. has been floated
as a permanent replacement for Flynn. Trump named him the acting
national security adviser after Flynn resigned.
Kellogg is a decorated U.S. Army veteran,
having served from 1967 to 2003. He earned the Silver Star, the Bronze
Star with “V” device and the Air Medal with “V” device during his time
in the Vietnam War.
Kellogg was chief operating officer of the Coalition
Provisional Authority in Iraq, the interim governing body following the
fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. He previously worked as executive vice
president of research and technology for Virginia-based information
technology firm CACI International, which works as a contractor for
defense, intelligence and homeland security agencies.
Another name floated as a possible replacement for Flynn is retired Gen. David Petraeus.
Trump routinely dropped Petraeus’ name during his
election campaign. Trump said that Petraeus was punished more severely
for leaking classified documents to his mistress than Hillary Clinton
was punished for setting up a private email server during his time as
Secretary of State.
READ: MICHAEL FLYNN’S LETTER OF RESIGNATION AS NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER
Petraeus was briefly considered for the secretary of
state job, but was passed up because of his rocky tenure as CIA chief
and the possibility that he wouldn’t be confirmed in the Senate because
of those issues.
According to the
Washington Examiner,
Bush’s former national security adviser Stephen Hadley and Tom Bossert,
a former national security aide under Bush have been considered a
Flynn’s replacement. The paper added that Adm. James Stavridis, a dean
at Tufts University, is also on the table.
Flynn’s resignation ended speculation about his fate
following reports he had misled Vice President Pence and other officials
about his contacts with Russia.
Flynn conceded that discussions of sanctions may have
come up during several calls with the Russian ambassador during the
transition period leading up to Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration.
He acknowledged that he gave "incomplete information"
about those discussions to Pence who, apparently relying on information
from the national security adviser, initially said Flynn had not
discussed sanctions with the Russian envoy.
Whoever emerges as Trump's choice will take the helm
of the National Security Council at a time when the young administration
is grappling with a series of national security challenges, including
North Korea's reported ballistic missile launch. The president, who was
joined at his Mar-a-Lago estate by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
over the weekend, voiced solidarity with Japan.
The White House is also dealing with fallout from the
rocky rollout of Trump's immigration executive order, which has been
blocked by the courts. The order was intended to suspend the nation's
refugee program and bar citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from
entering the United States.