Liverpool opener 'a completely absurd situation' – Jokanovic

Fulham stay bottom of the Premier League after a 2-0 loss at Anfield, with their manager left fuming over the Reds opening goal

Slavisa Jokanovic described Liverpool’s opening goal in their 2-0 Premier League win over his Fulham side as “completely absurd”.

Aleksandar Mitrovic appeared to have given Fulham the lead late in the first half at Anfield on Sunday, but the goal was ruled out for offside.

And just 14 seconds later the ball was in Fulham’s net, Mohamed Salah completing a rapid counter-attack to put Jurgen Klopp’s hosts in front.

Xherdan Shaqiri added the second for Liverpool after the interval to temporarily move the Reds top of the Premier League table with Manchester City yet to play Sunday.

Replays indicated Mitrovic was marginally onside, played on by Andrew Robertson, and Jokanovic was left baffled by the decision to disallow the goal, although he accepted Liverpool outplayed Fulham.

“I watched the clips and Robertson definitely didn’t squeeze up enough,” Jokanovic told a news conference. “My players are onside and scored the goal.

“Is the ball rolling [for the restart]? Probably yes. It was a crucial moment and we went from being one goal up to one goal down.

“It’s a complicated situation, but you must be sure before you make this kind of decision. We can talk about this situation for hours but the damage is done.

“I don’t want to say Liverpool don’t deserve the win. They created the chances and scored the goals, but we didn’t defend this counter-attack well, although this counter-attack shouldn’t exist.

“It’s a completely absurd situation, but we needed to defend. This guy [Salah] is really fast and finished the action well, but the sensation is that we’re frustrated, disappointed.”

Despite losing their seventh game in a row in all competitions, Jokanovic was determined to take some positives from his side’s Anfield reverse.

“My team played a decent game against a complicated opponent,” Jokanovic continued. “Even before we scored the goal we had two very good chances. We showed we can play organised and be solid against a really complicated team.

“I can’t leave satisfied with this defeat but while we might not have taken a step forward, we definitely made half a step forward. The team showed desire, organisation and a positive face in looking for a better performance.

“Calum Chambers played as a holding defensive midfielder and gave us a little bit of balance and power. He did a good job outside of his natural position and can be an option we can think about in the future.”

Man City left sweating as injured Bernardo Silva withdraws from Portugal squad

The playmaker is set to miss his country’s UEFA Nations League match against Poland on Tuesday night

Manchester City midfielder Bernardo Silva has withdrawn from the latest Portugal squad due to injury, the Portuguese Football Federation has confirmed.

The 24-year-old travelled with the national side but will not feature against Poland in Portugal’s UEFA Nations League tie in Guimaraes on Tuesday night.

In a statement, the Portuguese Football Federation said: “Following medical and diagnostic tests performed by the FPF Health and Performance Unit, player Bernardo Silva was considered unavailable for the meeting against Poland.”

Silva scored what proved to be a vital third goal in a 3-2 victory for Portugal the last time the two sides met in October.

The nature and severity of the midfielder’s injury has yet to be confirmed, but City boss Pep Guardiola will be hoping that it does not rule him out of Saturday’s Premier League trip to the London Stadium to face West Ham.

In the absence of Kevin de Bruyne, Silva has assumed the mantle of chief playmaker with ease so far this campaign, featuring in all 12 of City’s league matches and contributing three goals and three assists in the process. He has also provided two goals in four Champions League outings.

Guardiola’s side sit two points clear of second-placed Liverpool, who travel to Watford at the weekend, and will be looking to maintain their unbeaten start to the season.

Silva picked up a minor groin complaint while on international duty in a 1-1 friendly draw with Croatia back in September, although on that occasion his withdrawal at half-time proved to be a cautionary decision made by manager Fernando Santos.

Tuesday’s fixture will have no bearing on the outcome of Portugal’s UEFA Nations League group, with Santos’ men having already confirmed their qualification for the semi-finals and Poland having already been relegated to League B.

The finals of the tournament will be held in Portugal next year, with two knockout semi-finals being contested before the final itself is played on June 9.

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Lenglet plays down Dembele Barcelona exit reports amid Liverpool links

The defender insists that a stomach bug ruled his countryman out of the weekend’s action, amid rumours all is not well at Camp Nou

Clement Lenglet has moved to deny reports that Ousmane Dembele is restless at Barcelona, despite the forward’s ongoing struggle to carve out a regular place in the club’s starting line-up. 

Dembele was considered one of football’s top young talents when he swapped Borussia Dortmund for Camp Nou in 2017, after a single, scintillating season in the Bundesliga put his name on everyone’s lips. 

The France international has, however, found life in Spain hard going, struggling with a lack of opportunities and a series of niggling injuries in his debut season which impeded efforts to make a name for himself at his new club.

While Dembele started 2018-19 as a starter he has been relegated to the bench for Barca’s most recent outings, and did not even make Ernesto Valverde’s matchday squad for Sunday’s defeat at the hands of Betis. 

Rumours have linked the forward with a switch to Liverpool in recent times but Lenglet believes his team-mate is content at Camp Nou, while also explaining his absence at the weekend. 

“If Dembele looked serious in the stands I think that is understandable,” the defender explained to  Goal  when asked about his compatriot’s behaviour. 

“We were losing and if he started to laugh people would not understand that either. I don’t think there is any problem with him, he was ill, he couldn’t make training and the coach chose another player. 

“These are things that happen at every club and we all have to pull in the same direction to reach our goals.”

Unlike Dembele, who was part of the France squad that lifted the World Cup over the summer, Lenglet is yet to make his bow at senior level after starring for Les Bleus from the Under-16s to U-21s. 

The defender was overlooked again by Didier Deschamps for November’s clashes against Netherlands and Uruguay, but he is remaining patient while waiting for his opportunity. 

“I have a lot to learn still. If I am not on the list it is because there are still things I have to improve but I am working at Barcelona with the best in the world and that helps me to grow,” he added. 

“I am not impatient. If the call comes I will be very happy but in the meantime I will keep working as always to wait for my moment, I am focused on enjoying the day-to-day.”

Lenglet also believes that at 23 he can continue to hone his game at Barcelona, where talent on the ball is fundamental. 

“It is a different style to that of any other club. You have to think before receiving the ball, always position yourself well to go from one side to the other and think about the pitch all the time,” he said. 

“It is hard for defenders because we defend far from our goal and we have to press constantly. That is difficult to adapt to but it is a great thing. 

“When we manage it we will be able to play the way we want to, and that is the toughest thing in football.” 

Ze Roberto: I played until I was 43 – so why can't Brazil's ageing stars?

The former Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Palmeiras man has backed coach Tite to lead the Selecao back to glory



Versatile, intelligent and just about as fit as footballers get, Ze Roberto played out a remarkable and long career that saw him make history just about everywhere he went. 

In addition to titles with Portuguesa, Palmeiras, Santos and Bayern Munich, the former player also shone with Brazil.

A member of the 2006 World Cup squad, ‘Zé’ was a two-time Copa America-winner and also twice helped the Selecao to Confederations Cup glory. He was also understudy to the great Roberto Carlos at France ’98.

He finally called time on his career last year, having played on past his 43rd birthday – and few would suggest he looked anywhere near past it even then. But everything comes to an end. 

For Ze Roberto, however, that end brought a new beginning with an advisory role at Palmeiras, where he spent his final three seasons grabbing a Copa do Brasil title and lifting the Brasileirao first division.

This week he will have his eyes set firmly on the Brasil Global Tour, and is intrigued by the process of transition that coach Tite is overseeing following this year’s World Cup in Russia.

“I think the Selecao is going through a period of evolution and are giving opportunities to new players,” he told Brasil Global Tour. 

“I think this vision, the mentality Tite has, is really important so that he can build a competitive team and that can fight in the upcoming competitions, because Brazil have so much potential. Right now, it’s all about preparing for the Copa America and I think they are on the right track.”

While he ended his playing days back at left-back, Ze Roberto spent almost a decade as one of Europe’s leading midfielders and believes it is that area where the Selecao excel today.

“This is a very strong midfield,” he said. “I think he already has a [combination] in mind but there are many other possibilities to include players with different characteristics. 

“I think it’s up to the coach, to go with the vision that Tite has as he fits all the pieces together so that he forms a highly competitive team that can win titles again.”

Further back, renovations appear more necessary after Brazil went into the World Cup with a back-four that featured three players who are now past their 34th birthdays.

But Ze Roberto, of course, would go on for another nine years past that milestone. And after Miranda said he could go on until World Cup 2022, perhaps Ze can offer some advice.

“I think if the player takes care of himself then he can go on as long as he wants, at least that’s what allowed me to maintain my level and remain physically able to continue to 43-years-old,” Ze Roberto added.

“I always took good care of myself in my career, I always had the vision to pay special attention to my physical condition and that allowed me to play to a high level much later on in my career.

“It depends on the performance of the individual, the mentality of the coaching staff, but anything is possible. The squad has players who are professional and take great care of themselves for their career and maybe they can play at high level until they are 40 or older.”

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Sorry, Jurgen, but the Nations League is anything but 'pointless'!

The German isn’t a fan but, as UEFA’s Giorgio Marchetti tells Goal, the competition has turned “interest-free friendlies” into “meaningful” games

UEFA endured a good deal of criticism when launching the Nations League. There were complaints over the merits of a new international competition when European teams already had the World Cup and European Championship to deal with.

There was widespread confusion over the format of the new competition, which would bring promotion and relegation to the international game, as well as a new method for sorting seeds for the Euros.

Friendly dates were drifting listlessly but there was little expectation that the Nations League would do anything to alleviate that. The Nations League, however, has defied all expectations: it has breathed new life into international weeks in the absences of qualification matches.

“The feedback has been very positive,” Giorgio Marchetti, UEFA’s deputy general secretary, tells Goal. “This competition has impressed many people.

“One of the objectives was to turn the interest-free friendlies into very interesting matches. I don’t want to appear as immodest, but I think it’s been achieved because the matches were even more meaningful than people expected.”

Teams ranked No.1 in Europe and No. 55 in Europe have been given something meaningful to play for, whether it’s a spot in next summer’s final four tournament in Portugal, promotion or a play-off slot for Euro 2020. And the matches in the last matchday, in particular, gave UEFA the type of drama it could have only dreamed of.

“You see what happened in some of these rounds and I’m not just talking about the matches of League A,” Marchetti enthuses. “Incredible clashes, incredible comebacks, the interest was alive to the very end of the very last match.”

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The Netherlands, Switzerland, England and Portugal will contest the mini-tournament next June but it took until the last moments of the last games before three of those four places were assured.

Harry Kane’s winner for England against Croatia turned that group entirely on its head. Switzerland somehow overcame Belgium by a score of 5-2 when Roberto Martinez’s side had been 2-0 up and making plans for Portugal. And Virgil van Dijk’s last-gasp equaliser against Germany meant world champions France would have no chance of adding to their World Cup title for the time being.

Add to that the relegation of Germany from the top flight and you have as much drama – and more – as you would expect from the club game.

Meanwhile, teams like Belarus, Georgia, Macedonia, Finland and Norway have already been funnelled into the playoffs for Euro 2020. That is not something generally available to teams of their ranks but comes as a key benefit to competition in the Nations League.

“It is definitely an extra, super-important motivation,” Marchetti says. “Of course, this was extremely important for all the teams, but even beyond that everyone feels that they have something to compete for.

“By winning the league you get promotion and you get some more money, which means we have found all the possible incentives for the teams. I think the fans have understood it too.”

Indeed, that understanding was tested in the early days when players such as Harry Maguire admitted that they weren’t entirely sure about the competition’s format. Things, however, should appear much clearer now it’s been completed.

“Every time we change, it’s difficult to get an understanding,” Marchetti says. “But it’s not difficult to understand.

“The system that we have taken for this international competition is nothing worse or nothing less than a normal league system as applied to clubs, everywhere in every country.”

UEFA has also had to deal with Jurgen Klopp’s “pointless” jibe as well as constant chirping from critics who claimed the new tournament would mean nothing to players, coaches or fans. The Nations League – in many ways – was written off before it had begun.

“Of course, everyone has a point of view and the point of view of a club manager is not necessarily the same as a coach of a national team,” says Marchetti. “This is a very meaningful competition for sure.”

Once the Euro 2020 tournament winds down, there will be another opportunity to do it all over again. That said, there may be room for some minor adjustments for the 2020-21 edition.

“You always have to learn lessons,” Marchetti says. “There is nothing which is perfect and everything is open to improvement.

“We will definitely be debriefing about the Nations League, thinking about the future. We will never stand still. Whenever there is something to improve, to make the competition better, we will go for it.

“We will be brainstorming about the Nations League. We will try to identify if there is anything we can do to make it even better.”

And, even as FIFA president Gianni Infantino mulls over replacing the Confederations Cup and Europe’s top clubs reportedly moot a breakaway Super League, UEFA is reasonably assured that the Nations League is here to stay.

“The Nations League has been accommodated comfortably in the dates of the international match calendar,” Marchetti says.

“We don’t anticipate any possible change. Of course, the calendar can also be optimised but the space for national teams will be there.

“And we are just planning ahead for the future to have the Nations League which is established now. And definitely one of the must-haves in the international landscape.”

Overall, UEFA could not be happier about the first edition of the Nations League. Indeed, when asked to give the inaugural competition a score out of 10, Marchetti quips, “Can I say 10?!

“It’s not me saying that. I have read many, many pieces about the Nations League. The media are usually very demanding and I’ve seen widespread praise for the Nations League from different countries, coming from many sources, different journalists.

“If this is what the opinion leaders think, the media thinks and the fans think, then it’s very good. At UEFA, we are very happy that the Nations League has been introduced and we are very happy that all matches count for national teams. It’s a good asset to look after.”

Djorkaeff expected Henry to struggle with Monaco

The former France star is confident his former team-mate will successfully emerge from a poor start to life as a head coach

Youri Djorkaeff believes Thierry Henry will succeed with Monaco, despite a tough start to his coaching career.

Following Wednesday’s 2-0 loss to Atletico Madrid in the Champions League, Monaco have won only one match out of eight since Henry took over from Leonardo Jardim in October.

That victory came last weekend, 1-0 away to Caen in Ligue 1, as the club currently sits in 19th with 10 points from 14 matches.

According to Djorkaeff, however, Monaco’s situation meant this initial period of difficulty was inevitable.

“Yes, I expected him to struggle, because I know Monaco very well,” Djorkaeff told Omnisport. “I played over four years there, I know the squad and I know the club, and I knew that joining Monaco was not an easy choice for Thierry Henry.

“The recruitment was focused on young players, players to develop, so the results will come in one year, maybe two. And more importantly, he has 15 players injured that he won’t be able to field for three weeks or maybe a month.”

Before winning the World Cup and European Championship together with France, Djorkaeff and Henry spent a season together at Monaco.

Irrespective of recent form, the 50-year-old believes Henry, who previously worked as an assistant under Roberto Martinez at Belgium, will make a capable coach.

“When he joined Monaco he knew the problems, but he knows the club very well, it will take time and I think he has it in himself to be a coach,” Djorkaeff said.

“He loves coaching, he loves talking with his players. He’s having problems but I’m sure it’s going to get better, he won last weekend so he’ll be able to breathe a bit more, and step by step, he’ll climb back.”

Up next for Monaco is a match with Montepellier, who are currently third in Ligue 1.

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Netanyahu announces he can't establish government

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahuBenjamin (Bibi) NetanyahuMORE on Monday informed President Reuven Rivlin he has been unable to form a government, according to Haaretz.

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“Ever since receiving the mandate [to form a government] I have worked relentlessly … to establish a broad national unity government. This is what the people want,” Netanyahu said in a video posted to Facebook on Monday.

Since receiving the mandate, however, Netanyahu said he has been unsuccessful in bringing Benny Gantz, leader of Kahol Lavan, the largest party in the Israeli Knesset, saying Gantz has “refused time after time.”

 

 

Rivlin’s office said in a statement that he will turn the mandate to form a government over to Gantz, who would have 28 days to form it, according to Haaretz. Rivlin is likely to make the decision official by Thursday evening.

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“The time for spins is over, now is the time for actions. Kahol Lavan is determined to form a liberal national unity government headed by Benny Gantz, for which the people voted last month,” the party said in a statement.

If Rivlin decides against allowing Gantz to form a government, the task will instead fall to the Knesset, which will also be responsible for forming a government if Gantz does not make the 28-day deadline.

Ozone hole shrinks to lowest size since 1982, unrelated to climate change: NASA

Scientists at NASA said Monday that the hole in the Earth’s ozone layer has shrunk to the smallest size on record since it was first detected in the 1970s.

A press release from the agency reported that the hole, which naturally grows and shrinks every year due to temperatures in the Arctic, had shrunk to its yearly low in late September and October, surpassing record lows registered in past years.

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The hole now sits at 3.9 million square miles, according to NASA, the lowest level on record since the hole was first detected in 1982. Scientists at NASA’s headquarters in Greenbelt, Md., said that the change in temperatures leading to warmer air in the Arctic, which contributes to ozone gap shrinkage, was related to normal yearly phenomenon and not climate change.

“It’s great news for ozone in the Southern Hemisphere,” said Paul Newman, chief scientist for earth sciences at the facility. “But it’s important to recognize that what we’re seeing this year is due to warmer stratospheric temperatures. It’s not a sign that atmospheric ozone is suddenly on a fast track to recovery.”

“This year, ozonesonde measurements at the South Pole did not show any portions of the atmosphere where ozone was completely depleted,” added Bryan Johnson, an atmospheric scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Boulder, Colo., laboratory.

Scientists are hoping that the dangerous hole in the Earth’s ozone layer, which contributes to increased negative effects from ultraviolet rays across the world, will dissipate following the decision to ban ozone-harming chemicals, some of which remain in the atmosphere, during the 1970s.

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Here's what to watch this week on impeachment

House Democrats are set to depose a number of new witnesses this week as part of their impeachment inquiry examining President TrumpDonald John TrumpZuckerberg launches public defense of Facebook as attacks mount Trump leaning toward keeping a couple hundred troops in eastern Syria: report Warren says making Israel aid conditional on settlement building is ‘on the table’ MORE’s contacts with Ukraine.

None of the witnesses are household names, but all could have information on the Trump administration’s activities in Ukraine — as well as Trump personal attorney Rudy GiulianiRudy GiulianiHurd: No Ukrainian officials have told State Department ‘they felt like their arms were being twisted’ House Democrat pledges ‘there will be open hearings’ in impeachment inquiry Combatting fake news on social media will take a village MORE’s more informal foreign policy role on behalf of the president.

The week’s full list of witnesses, according to an official familiar with the impeachment inquiry, is subject to change as House Democrats continue to negotiate to bring people in for questioning.

Here’s a look at some of the key figures expected to testify this week as Democrats continue to seek to build a case for impeachment.

William Taylor, chargé d’affaires for Ukraine

William Taylor is the most high-profile witness for Democrats this week.

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Taylor, who is scheduled for a deposition on Tuesday, exchanged text messages with U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland and former Special Envoy to Ukraine Kurt VolkerKurt VolkerPerry won’t comply with subpoena in impeachment inquiry Ex-Watergate prosecutor says evidence in impeachment inquiry ‘clearly’ points to Trump Trump confirms Rick Perry to step down as Energy secretary MORE, which were released publicly by Democrats, that showed he was worried the Trump administration was withholding aid to Ukraine to convince its government to conduct political investigations for President Trump.

Taylor in one text appeared to threaten to quit if a possible “nightmare scenario” unfolded in which Trump reneged on providing military aid even if Ukraine’s president committed to doing an unspecified “interview.”

“The nightmare is they give the interview and don’t get the security assistance,” Taylor texted to Volker and Sondland, according to the transcripts released by Democrats. “The Russians love it. (And I quit).”

Taylor also warned in a text message one day later that the aid holdup was straining U.S. relations with Ukraine, saying: “With the hold, we have already shaken their faith in us. This is my nightmare scenario.”

A West Point and Harvard alum, Taylor has a long record of public service. In 2006, Taylor served as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine for three years. Following the ousting of U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch earlier this year, Taylor was tapped to serve as chargé d’affaires for Ukraine.

Rep. Raja KrishnamoorthiSubramanian (Raja) Raja KrishnamoorthiHere’s what to watch this week on impeachment Sondland could provide more clues on Ukraine controversy Trump’s cruelty toward immigrants weakens rather than strengthens America MORE (D-Ill.) said the text messages between Volker, Sondland and Taylor also mention phone calls. Democrats hope to learn more about those communications during Taylor’s deposition.

Philip Reeker

Democrats are interested in talking to Reeker, the acting Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, because other evidence suggests he might have heard about a campaign to discredit Yovanovitch.

Reeker, a career diplomat, is scheduled to testify Wednesday, a week after longtime State Department official George Kent.

The State Department inspector general provided Congress with documents earlier this month that, according to reports, showed Kent raised concerns to his superiors at State, including Reeker, that he feared there was a “classic disinformation operation” being carried out against Yovanovitch.

Reeker has nearly three decades of experience in the foreign service, according to his State Department biography. He also formerly served as the U.S. Ambassador to Macedonia from 2008 to 2011 and has received multiple awards for his work in public service.

White House official Michael Duffey

Duffey is a key figure in the administration’s decision to withhold aid from Ukraine and the one political appointee in next week’s mix.

The Trump administration gave Duffey, the associate director of national security programs at the Office of Management and Budget, the authority to stall Ukraine aid after career civil servants in the White House raised concerns that they did not have the legal power to delay such funds, The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month.

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Duffey’s role in signing off on apportionments is considered odd, the Journal reported, as sources described the responsibility as one that is typically handled by career officers who have years of experience and intimate knowledge of the funding process.

The matter of the stalled aid is being scrutinized by multiple House committees. 

Duffey, who is the second witness lined up to testify Wednesday, has also held various Pentagon posts and he has previous experience working on political campaigns, including serving as the Wisconsin state director in 2008 for the late Sen. John McCainJohn Sidney McCainCummings to lie in state at the Capitol Elizabeth Warren should concern Donald Trump ‘bigly’ Lawmakers toast Greta Van Susteren’s new show MORE (R-Ariz.), according to his biography.

Defense official Laura Cooper

Democrats are slated to hear from Cooper, a top Pentagon official, on Thursday.

Cooper, the deputy assistant secretary, has a nearly two-decade career of public service, including policy areas in Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia, according to her Department of Defense biography. 

Cooper was originally slated to testify Friday, but her closed-door deposition was moved to the following week for unclear reasons.

A spokesman for the House Intelligence Committee declined to comment on the committee’s interest in Cooper’s testimony, but some Democrats remarked that such witnesses are helpful for building a deep understanding of how things work behind the scenes.

“As a prosecutor, what we would do is we would sort of interview as many witnesses as we can before we ask major players for interviews,” said Rep. Ted LieuTed W. LieuHere’s what to watch this week on impeachment Testimony from GOP diplomat complicates Trump defense Lawmakers, social media users praise photo of Pelosi confronting Trump MORE (D-Calif.) on Wednesday. “That’s generally what you would do in an investigation.”

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the director for European affairs at the National Security Council (NSC), is also set to testify Thursday.

Fiona Hill, Trump’s former top Russia adviser, told House investigators that Giuliani circumvented NSC staff and other career diplomats while overseeing a “shadow foreign policy” on Ukraine that she claimed aimed to help the president politically, according to reports.

Sondland, one of the Trump officials who has come under scrutiny for his role in the Ukraine pressure campaign, has pushed back against reports of Hill’s closed-door testimony that he didn’t keep the NSC and State Department apprised of his work on Ukraine policy.

But Sondland and Hill are said to have conflicting accounts on several matters.

Additionally, Vindman makes an appearance in Sondland’s opening remarks that he delivered to House investigators Thursday. He describes Vindman as one of the few officials who attended the new Ukraine president’s inauguration as part of the U.S. delegation led by Energy Secretary Rick PerryJames (Rick) Richard PerryWhite House staggers after tumultuous 48 hours Perry won’t comply with subpoena in impeachment inquiry Overnight Energy: Trump taps deputy energy secretary to replace Perry | Praises pick Dan Brouillette as ‘total professional’ | Perry denies quid pro quo over Ukraine MORE.

Freshman Rep. Harley RoudaHarley Edwin RoudaHere’s what to watch this week on impeachment Testimony from GOP diplomat complicates Trump defense Ex-Trump aide on Russia testifies for 10 hours as part of impeachment inquiry MORE (D-Calif.) said he believes Vindman may also have observed key meetings in which Sondland was also involved.

“So that might be why some of those witnesses are wanted,” Rouda told The Hill Friday.

Tim Morrison

Morrison, who took over Hill’s role as the senior director for European and Russian affairs on the NSC, is another individual wrapped up in efforts to connect Trump and Zelensky.

The text messages between Volker, Sondland and Taylor also mention Morrison, suggesting he was open to the idea of setting up a phone call between the two world leaders — an idea his predecessor was seeking to delay.

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“I talked to Tim Morrison Fiona’s replacement. He is pushing but feel free as well,” Sondland wrote to the two other U.S. diplomats. The message came after Volker notified the text group that he had placed a “call into Fiona’s replacement” and would call Bolton “if needed” to relay the fact that Giuliani supported a Trump-Zelensky phone call.

The Washington Post also reported last month that Morrison sought to host meetings in order to determine efforts to affect Ukraine policy that went outside the normal foreign diplomacy channels.

Morrison has been asked to testify Friday, according to reports, along with Suriya Jayanti, a foreign service officer at the U.S. Embassy in Kiev. 

 

Diplomats describe all-time low in morale at State under Trump

The Trump administration’s perennial push for steep budget cuts, an exodus of senior staffers with decades of experience and constant allegations that agency employees represent a deep state has sent morale at the State Department to an unprecedented low.

On top of that, President TrumpDonald John TrumpZuckerberg launches public defense of Facebook as attacks mount Trump leaning toward keeping a couple hundred troops in eastern Syria: report Warren says making Israel aid conditional on settlement building is ‘on the table’ MORE has fired a senior diplomat after a whisper campaign mounted by his personal lawyer, Rudy GiulianiRudy GiulianiHurd: No Ukrainian officials have told State Department ‘they felt like their arms were being twisted’ House Democrat pledges ‘there will be open hearings’ in impeachment inquiry Combatting fake news on social media will take a village MORE, and abandoned steadfast allies in the Middle East to fend for themselves on the battlefield at the behest of Turkey’s government.

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Current and former diplomats say the weight of those events is taking a startling and measurable toll on American foreign relations, and on their ability to carry out policy set by the White House.

Those diplomats are increasingly concerned that the White House and senior State Department leadership do not have their backs, particularly after Trump’s allies launched a whisper campaign that ended in the recall of Marie Yovanovitch as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.

They also worry the president’s decision to withdraw American troops from northern Syria — abandoning longtime Kurdish allies who fought the war against the Islamic State — will cause other allies to think twice about partnering with the United States.

“We have squandered our global leadership, alienated our friends and emboldened our enemies,” said one U.S. ambassador, who asked not to be named to provide a candid assessment. Morale in recent weeks, the ambassador said, “is at a new low, although I am not sure it could fall much lower than where it has been for the past three years.”

The State Department and White House did not respond to requests for comment.

In interviews, half a dozen current and former senior foreign service officers said the last few weeks have undermined what little faith they had left in Secretary of State Mike PompeoMichael (Mike) Richard PompeoGOP lawmaker: Trump administration ‘playing checkers’ in Syria while others are ‘playing chess’ Trump-Graham relationship tested by week of public sparring White House officials work to tamp down controversies after a tumultuous week MORE, one of Trump’s closest advisers.

Pompeo arrived in Foggy Bottom after diplomats endured a trying year under his predecessor, Rex TillersonRex Wayne TillersonTrump sends nomination for Russia ambassador to Senate Democrats eye Pompeo testimony On The Money: IMF estimates US-China trade war to shave 0.8 percent from global economy | NY prosecutors urge appeals court not to block Trump tax subpoena | Turkish bank linked to Giuliani client charged with fraud, money laundering MORE, who tried to slash his own budget and let senior civil and foreign service members walk out the door — a period one former ambassador called the “red terror.” Tillerson’s proposed cuts were so dramatic that Congress refused to allow them.

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Pompeo and his top deputy held several town hall meetings and distributed videos of his foreign trips, dubbed “Miles with Mike,” in what Pompeo called an effort to rebuild the State Department’s “swagger.”

“When Pompeo came in, people were absolutely willing to give him the benefit of the doubt,” said Laura Kennedy, a former U.S. ambassador to Turkmenistan and deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs in the George W. Bush administration.

“Our cousins up the river in Langley said, ‘Hey, he’s a good guy,’” the former ambassador said, referring to the year Pompeo spent running the CIA earlier on in Trump’s presidency.

But Pompeo’s alliance with Trump has come at the cost of his reputation with career officials. He was on the July 25 phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, when Trump promised that Yovanovitch was “going to go through some things.” On Wednesday, Pompeo’s former top aide, Michael McKinley, told House lawmakers that Pompeo did nothing when McKinley urged him to offer Yovanovitch a show of public support.

Pompeo on Sunday defended Trump’s recall of Yovanovitch on ABC’s “This Week.”

“Ambassadors serve at the pleasure of the president,” Pompeo said. “And when a president loses confidence in an ambassador — it’s not in that ambassador, the State Department or America’s best interests for them to continue to stay in their post.”

Current and former officials have panned Pompeo’s handling of the situation.

“Trump is Trump. I guess people just sort of get used to it. But a big change is in the perception of Pompeo,” Kennedy said. “Big fat F in terms of this one.”

The irony of that phone call, in which Trump pushed for Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenZuckerberg launches public defense of Facebook as attacks mount Graham: ‘Stupid’ for Trump to ask China to investigate Biden Romney: Republicans don’t criticize Trump because they fear it will help Warren MORE and his son Hunter, who sat on the board of a Ukrainian energy company, was that rooting out corruption has been at the heart of American policy toward Ukraine for years. Yovanovitch had made fighting corruption a cornerstone of her years in Kiev.

“Here’s a U.S. ambassador pushing a major U.S. policy platform, fighting corruption. We all knew Ukraine’s only chance was to get a handle on the corruption going on in that country,” said the former ambassador who spoke to The Hill. 

“We’re no longer the shining city on the hill. We’ve been out there espousing American values, and then we come home to see America isn’t espousing American values,” the former ambassador said. “You cannot go overseas and lecture a partner nation on corruption when you’ve got this going on with the president’s sons. When people are currying favor with the White House by first and foremost booking themselves into the Trump Hotel in Washington, D.C.”

Now, the foreign service officers who pride themselves on carrying out their orders from Washington, regardless of whether those orders are given by a Democratic or Republican administration, believe that they serve at the pleasure of a president who views them as members of a so-called deep state.

“We do not expect, nor should we, that we can become the target of blatant political warfare apparently supported by our own Department leadership,” the current ambassador said. “Who knew that an administration could sink so low as to sell out its own employees, carrying out stated U.S. policy, for personal political gain?”

It has not been lost on current and former State Department officials that the first people to willingly sit down with the House Intelligence Committee during its impeachment inquiry have been ambassadors, including Yovanovitch, McKinley, former U.S. special envoy to Ukraine Kurt VolkerKurt VolkerPerry won’t comply with subpoena in impeachment inquiry Ex-Watergate prosecutor says evidence in impeachment inquiry ‘clearly’ points to Trump Trump confirms Rick Perry to step down as Energy secretary MORE and Gordon Sondland, a Trump ally and U.S. ambassador to the European Union. Another career foreign policy expert, Fiona Hill, also testified.

“In the last couple of weeks, it’s almost like a dam has burst,” Kennedy said. “People are just much more willing to speak out.”

Some said that while the decision to end Yovanovitch’s tenure early would harm their ability to advance American interests through diplomacy, the decision to pull troops out of Syria and leave Kurdish allies to fight Turkey’s much more advanced military would cause more lasting damage.

“As shocking as the Ukraine situation is, Syria kills us,” the former ambassador said. “This is an ally in a war. All the other allies are watching how we treat our allies.”

Inside the State Department, tensions between political appointees and career appointees are rising, sources said. Yovanovitch’s firing has underscored the tensions — and the lack of trust — between career officials and political appointees. Several sources said they felt they were being scrutinized by political appointees who could report disloyalty to senior officials. 

“Every day, you’re suspect. You never know when you’re going to be put to the guillotine,” one senior foreign service officer said.

The staff reductions that began under Tillerson have left gaping holes that remain today, more than a year after he left the administration. Eight of the 28 assistant secretary positions are being run by acting secretaries who have not been confirmed by the Senate. Two more are vacant. One of six undersecretaries is acting, and two more posts — overseeing public diplomacy and civilian security, democracy and human rights — are vacant.

“A number of bureaus are being run by career people, but they’re not nominated [to fill those roles on a permanent basis]. It sends a very strong signal of, ‘We don’t trust you, we don’t respect you, and we won’t empower you,’” Kennedy said.

Amid the departure of experienced senior officers, and further White House efforts to slash the State Department’s budget, there are worrying signs that the ranks of the foreign service are not being replenished. The number of applicants who have taken the Foreign Service exam, the first step toward becoming a career foreign service officer, has fallen every year since 2009, when former President Obama took office.

During Trump’s presidency, the number of applicants has dropped even more precipitously. In 2018, just 9,168 people took the test, the first step on an exhaustive path to becoming a Foreign Service officer; that figure was less than half the number who applied in 2013, according to the American Foreign Service Association. 

“What makes this really different is it comes against two-and-a-half or almost three years of unrelenting criticism of the foreign service, the civil service, constant denigration of the work, being told you’re part of the deep swamp,” Kennedy said. “This is a building that’s been very seriously battered.”

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