He will replace Lt Gen Michael Flynn who was fired after
just three weeks and three days in the job.
BBC reports that Mr Trump’s first choice, retired Vice
Admiral Robert Harward, turned down the role, citing “personal reasons”.
Announcing the appointment at his Mar-a-Lago estate in
Florida, President Trump called Gen McMaster “a man of tremendous talent and
tremendous experience”.
“He is highly respected by everybody in the military,” he
said.
Gen Flynn stepped down after misleading Vice-President Mike
Pence over his conversations with Russia’s ambassador to the US.
Keith Kellogg, who took over as acting national security
adviser after the resignation, will now serve as the National Security Council
chief of staff.
Gen McMaster is known for expressing his views and
questioning authority. Time magazine named him as one of its 100 most
influential people in the world in 2014, saying he “might be the 21st Century
Army’s pre-eminent warrior-thinker”.
Thanking the US president for the new position on Monday,
Gen McMaster said: “I would just like to say what a privilege it is to be able
to continue serving our nation and I’m grateful to you for that opportunity.
“I look forward to joining the National Security team and
doing everything I can to advance and protect the interest of the American
people.”
Earlier President Trump had been forced to deny accusations
that he was struggling to find a replacement for Gen Flynn, telling reporters
on Air Force One on Saturday that he had “many, many that want the job”.
The other candidates in the running were Robert Caslen, an
Army lieutenant general who is the superintendent of the US Military Academy at
West Point, and career diplomat John Bolton, who served as George W Bush’s
ambassador to the UN from August 2006 to December 2006.
Mr Trump held interviews with the four men at Mar-a-Lago
where he spent the third weekend in a row.
He has called Mar-a-Lago, a private property, the “Southern
White House”.
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