Trump’s ‘lone ranger’: How Steve Witkoff became the de facto point man on America’s foreign policy challenges

CNN —
Last month a private jet belonging to Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff winged its way from Abu Dhabi to Doha to Moscow and Baku, before finally flying to Florida, where Witkoff briefed President Donald Trump on his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin — all within the span of a few days.
It was just another week for Witkoff, whose globetrotting is now taking him well beyond his original job as it becomes increasingly clear that he has what few others, if any, in the administration do: the absolute faith of President Trump.
The pace in recent weeks has not abated. Witkoff met with Ukrainians and Europeans in Paris on Thursday to discuss driving an end to the Ukraine War, before he was scheduled to zip over to Rome for a second round of talks with Iran to pave the way for a possible nuclear deal.
In three short months, Witkoff has become Trump’s defacto point-man on some of the most urgent foreign policy challenges facing the new administration. His expansive remit has at times verged into territory usually reserved for secretaries of state and CIA directors.
For someone who’s never worked in government, that’s raised questions in Washington and abroad over how Trump views the other more traditional and experienced foreign policy hands on his team — and whether Witkoff is truly equipped to operate at such a high level on the world stage.
“Very few people outside the White House inner circle have worked with him. He operates as quite the lone ranger,” said a longtime US official who spoke to CNN on condition of anonymity in order to talk freely. “Doing this shuttle diplomacy without a single expert is definitely unusual. I really can’t explain that. It’s odd and it’s not ideal.”
Though it’s early going, so far results have been mixed. Witkoff has been unable to resurrect the truce in Gaza that fell apart last month. Russia has so far rejected the ceasefire the US called for in Ukraine over a month ago. And this week, the Iranian foreign minister called Witkoff’s shifting position on their nuclear program “contradictory and conflicting.”
On the Ukraine front, frustration is mounting over the lack of progress. Speaking to reporters on Friday from Paris, where he was joined by Witkoff for high-level talks with European and Ukrainian officials, Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned that the US could end its efforts to seek peace.
“If it is not possible to end the war in Ukraine, we need to move on,” Rubio told reporters before departing Paris. “We need to determine very quickly now, and I’m talking about a matter of days, whether or not this is doable.”