
US looking at closing nearly 30 overseas embassies and consulates
WASHINGTON — 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.
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.
State Department Spokesperson Tammy Bruce would not comment on the internal document or plans to drastically cut the State Department.
'I would suggest that you check with the White House and the President of the US as they continue to work on their budget plan and what they submit to Congress,' Bruce said. 'The kinds of numbers and what we tend to see is reporting that is early or wrong, based on leaked documents from somewhere unknown.'
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. — CNN
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Saudi Gazette
3 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Trump says relationship with Musk is over
WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump has said his relationship with Elon Musk is over. "I would assume so, yeah," Trump told NBC News on Saturday, when asked if he thought the pair's close relationship had ended. He replied "No" when asked if he wished to mend the damaged ties. The comments were Trump's latest since the epic fallout between him and Musk unraveled on social media. It came after the tech billionaire — who donated millions to Trump's election campaign and became a White House aide — publicly criticized the president's tax and spending bill, a key domestic policy. A majority of Republicans have fallen in line behind the president. Vice-President JD Vance said that Musk had "gone so nuclear" and may never be welcomed back into the fold. Vance told podcaster Theo Von that it was a "big mistake" for the Tesla and SpaceX CEO to attack the weeks, Musk had been criticizing Trump's signature legislation — dubbed the "Big Beautiful Bill" — as it made its way through said that, if passed, the bill would add trillions of dollars to the national deficit and "undermine" the work he did as the head of Doge, the Department of Government Efficiency, and its efforts to cut government after leaving Doge after 129 days in the job, Musk posted on his social media site X that the bill was a "disgusting abomination" — but did not criticize Trump Thursday, however, Trump told reporters he was "disappointed" with Musk's responded with a flurry of posts on X, saying that Trump would have lost the election without him and accusing Trump of being implicated in files of Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who died in jail awaiting sex trafficking has since deleted the post and Epstein's lawyer has come out denying the responded on his social media platform Truth Social, saying that Musk had gone "crazy". In one post, he threatened to cut Musk's contracts with the federal his interview with NBC News on Saturday, Trump said Musk had been "disrespectful to the office of the president"."I think it's a very bad thing, because he's very disrespectful. You could not disrespect the office of the president," Trump the world's richest man, who donated roughly $250m to Trump's presidential campaign, suggested during the social media feud that he might back some of Trump's opponents during next year's midterm elections, throwing his support behind challengers to the lawmakers who supported Trump's tax asked about the prospect of Musk backing Democratic candidates that run against Republicans, Trump said he would face "serious consequences". — BBC

Al Arabiya
3 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Trump attends UFC championship fight, taking a break from politics, Musk feud
President Donald Trump walked out to a thunderous standing ovation just ahead of the start of the UFC pay-per-view card at the Prudential Center on Saturday night, putting his public feud with tech billionaire Elon Musk on hold to instead watch the fierce battles inside the cage. Trump was accompanied by UFC President Dana White and the pair headed to their cageside seats to Kid Rock's 'American Bad Ass.' Trump and White did the same for UFC's card last November at Madison Square Garden, only then they were joined by Musk. Trump shook hands with fans and supporters — a heavyweight lineup that included retired boxing champion Mike Tyson — on his way to the cage. Trump was joined by his daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, along with son Eric Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Trump shook hands with the UFC broadcast team that included Joe Rogan. Rogan hosted Trump on his podcast for hours in the final stages of the campaign last year. UFC fans went wild for Trump and held mobile devices in their outstretched arms to snap pictures of him. Trump arrived in time for the start of a card set to include two championship fights. Julianna Peña and Merab Dvalishvili were scheduled to each defend their 135-pound championships. UFC fighter Kevin Holland won the first fight with Trump in the building, scaled the cage and briefly chatted with the President before his post-fight interview.

Al Arabiya
4 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
JD Vance says he hopes Elon Musk returns to fold after public feud with Trump
Vice President JD Vance said Elon Musk is making a 'huge mistake' in going after Donald Trump and expressed hopes the billionaire will come back into the fold following the public feud that unfolded. 'I'm always going to be loyal to the president and I hope that eventually Elon kind of comes back into the fold,' Vance said in an interview on the podcast 'This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von' released on Saturday. 'Maybe that's not possible now because he's gone so nuclear, but I hope it is.' Musk helped elect Trump and Vance in 2024 and assumed a role heading the Department of Government Efficiency, a cost-cutting effort that has so far fallen well short of the Tesla Inc. chief's initial promises. Trump and Musk's political alliance imploded on Thursday after Musk criticized the tax and spending policy bill backed by the president. The two men traded jabs that grew personal on social media, stunning watchers in Washington and on Wall Street. While Vance posted on X in support of Trump, saying that the president he was 'proud to stand beside him' and praising him as having 'done more than anyone in my lifetime to earn the trust of the movement he leads,' the interview with Von marked his first direct comments on Musk since the spat erupted. The president had encouraged Vance to speak diplomatically about Musk before his appearance on the podcast, according to a person familiar with the situation who shared details on condition of anonymity. 'The president doesn't think that he needs to be in a blood feud with Elon Musk, and I actually think if Elon chilled out a little bit, everything would be fine,' Vance said.