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Vice-Admiral Robert Harward turns down Trump’s offer of national security adviser job

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Vice-Admiral Robert Harward (centre) and Lietenant General Vincent K. Brooks (left) are greeted by Lieutenant Colonel Javier Soria at a US base in southwest Asia in 2012. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

Vice-Admiral Robert Harward has turned down an offer to be US President Donald Trump’s new national security adviser, the latest blow to a new administration struggling to find its footing.

Harward said the Trump administration was “very accommodating to my needs, both professionally and personally.”

“It’s purely a personal issue,” Harward said Thursday evening. “I’m in a unique position finally after being the in military for 40 years to enjoy some personal time.”

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Asked whether he had requested to bring in his own staff at the National Security Council, Harward said: “I think that’s for the president to address.”

Following Flynn’s ouster, administration officials said his deputy, K.T. McFarland, was staying on at the NSC. McFarland is a former Fox News analyst.
Vice-Admiral Robert Harward in Zaranj, Afghanistan, in 2011. Photo: Reuters
Vice-Admiral Robert Harward in Zaranj, Afghanistan, in 2011. Photo: Reuters
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Harward would have replaced retired General Michael Flynn, who resigned at Trump’s request Monday after revelations that he misled Vice-President Mike Pence about discussing sanctions with Russia’s ambassador to the US during the transition. Trump said in a news conference Thursday that he was disappointed by how Flynn had treated Pence, but did not believe Flynn had done anything wrong by having the conversations.

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