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Meet Patrick Shanahan, the former Boeing executive nicknamed 'Mr. Fix-It' who's replacing General James Mattis as Defense secretary
Meet Patrick Shanahan, the former Boeing executive nicknamed 'Mr. Fix-It' who's replacing General James Mattis as Defense secretary
Áine CainDec 24, 2018, 02:22 IST
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Patrick Shanahan, the deputy defense secretary, will succeed defense secretary James Mattis and serve as acting defense secretary at the Pentagon.
Before being appointed as Mattis' deputy in 2017, Shanahan worked as a Boeing executive for decades.
The Washington state native was known throughout Boeing as a problem-solving "Mr. Fix-It."
It's official - deputy defense secretary Patrick Shanahan will be taking the helm at the Pentagon as acting secretary of defense.
James Mattis, who resigned from the position over US President Donald Trump's decision to pull troops out of Syria, will be forced out of the role before 2019. In his resignation letter, Mattis had offered to stay on for two months in order to facilitate a smooth transition.
Instead, Trump announced his new pick in a tweet on Sunday. He praised Shanahan, writing: "Patrick has a long list of accomplishments while serving as Deputy, & previously Boeing. He will be great!"
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But who exactly is Shanahan, and what sort of experience will the Washington state native and father of three bring to the role?
The eldest of three boys, Shanahan was born in 1962 to Michael and Jo-Anne Shanahan. Michael Shanahan was a law enforcement officer and a Vietnam vet, who was awarded a Bronze Star Medal for his service.
"Growing up, my understanding of the war came from my dad, his friends and the few stories they would share," Shanahan said in an article posted to the Department of Defense's website.
During his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Shanahan said that his father had also instilled a creed of "service before self" in him and his younger brothers as they grew up.
A native of Washington state, Shanahan attended the University of Washington, where he earned a degree in mechanical engineering. He remained involved with the school later in life, too. Starting in 2012, he served on the university's board of regents for five years.
His political donations appear to have been fairly even-handed between the two major parties. Between 1990 and 2016, Shanahan donated $6,250 to Republican and conservative causes and politicians, and $5,000 to Democratic and liberal causes and politicians.
Less than a year after squabbling with Boeing over the cost of Air Force One, Trump announced that he planned to appoint the longtime aerospace exec to the position of deputy director of defense on March 16, 2017.
During the proceedings, the late Senate Armed Services Committee chairman John McCain accused Shanahan of dodging questions about supporting Ukraine in their conflict with Russia.
McCain took issue with Shanahan's lukewarm response to arming Ukraine.
Shanahan said he and Mattis developed a good working relationship at the Pentagon. "He understands the lethal part and I am the engineer who can get it," he said in an article on the Department of Defense's website.
In an article posted on the Department of Defense's website, Shanahan said that the "operational" side of working at the Pentagon wasn't intimidating, but added, "The difference is the consequences. If you get something wrong here, it’s huge."