Trump administration looking at closing nearly 30 overseas embassies and consulates | CNN Politics


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Key Proposal: Embassy and Consulate Closures

The Trump administration is reviewing a plan to close roughly 30 overseas embassies and consulates, aiming for significant restructuring of its diplomatic footprint. The closures include 10 embassies and 17 consulates across Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean.

Impact and Rationale

The proposed closures impact missions in countries like Malta, Luxembourg, Lesotho, and others, with responsibilities potentially transferred to neighboring diplomatic posts. The document cites factors like regional bureau feedback, consular workload, costs, facility conditions, and security ratings as the basis for the recommendations. The administration's push for efficiency and cost reduction is a driving force.

Further Actions

The plan includes 'resizing' diplomatic missions in countries like Somalia and Iraq, and proposes model consolidations of support units. It also suggests 'FLEX-style' posts with limited staffing and 'dual-hatted' leadership in multiple missions. While some ambassadorial nominees have been announced, Secretary of State Rubio's approval remains unclear.

Concerns

The closures raise questions about the impact on vital services like visa processing and citizen assistance. The role of these embassies and consulates in information gathering and diplomatic efforts, particularly in countering nations like China, are also factors to be considered.

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Washington CNN  — 

The Trump administration is looking at closing nearly 30 overseas embassies and consulates as it eyes significant changes to its diplomatic presence abroad, according to an internal State Department document obtained by CNN.

The document also recommends reducing the footprint at the US diplomatic missions in Somalia and Iraq — two countries that have been key to US counterterrorism efforts — and “resizing” other diplomatic outposts.

The proposed changes come amid a broader expected overhaul of the US’ diplomatic agency as the Trump administration, spurred by the Elon Musk-backed Department of Government Efficiency makes dramatic efforts to shrink the federal government. It is unclear whether Secretary of State Marco Rubio has signed off on the proposed closures.

CNN has reached out to the State Department for comment on the document.

The document recommends closing 10 embassies and 17 consulates. Many of the posts are in Europe and Africa, though they also include ones in Asia and the Caribbean. They include embassies in Malta, Luxembourg, Lesotho, the Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic and South Sudan. The list also includes five consulates in France, two in Germany, two in Bosnia and Herzegovina, one in the United Kingdom, one in South Africa and one in South Korea.

The document proposes that the closed embassies’ duties be covered by outposts in neighboring countries.

The administration has announced ambassadorial nominees for only two of the embassies recommended for closure — Malta and Luxembourg.

CNN reported in March that the State Department was moving to close some of the consulates listed on the internal document.

Embassies and consulates serve as important outposts for the State Department. They provide services like visa processing and assistance for American citizens in need. The posts also collect information to send back to Washington, DC, and officials say they are an important diplomatic tool as the US looks to counter nations like China. Most consulates do not have a large workforce.

The document, which says it is the State Department’s undersecretary for management’s recommendations for closure, notes that “posts were evaluated based on feedback from regional bureaus and the interagency, consular workload, cost per USDH (US direct hire) billet, condition of facilities, and security ratings.”

For the recommended “resizing,” the document notes that the US missions in Japan and Canada “could serve as a model large mission by consolidating consulate support into a specialized unit” in larger posts.

It proposes “FLEX-style light footprint posts with limited focus and staffing” in a number of countries, as well as “dual-hatted leadership” in multi-mission posts, such as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and UNESCO in Paris.

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