White House is yet to send to the U.S. Senate the nomination of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, whose name has been doing the rounds for the Ambassador role in New Delhi.
The U.S. State Department announced the appointment of Atul Keshap, a senior foreign service officer with years of experience in South Asia, as Chargé d’Affaires (CDA) ad interim, in New Delhi, to replace Daniel Smith, who is retiring.
Mr. Keshap’s appointment highlights the fact that the White House is yet to send to the U.S. Senate the nomination of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, whose name has been doing the rounds for the Ambassador role in New Delhi since the end of May.
Mr. Keshap was formerly the U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives and played a key role in developing the U.S.-Maldives defence relationship. The two countries signed on to a framework for their security relationship last September.
He also served as Deputy Assistance Secretary for South Asia and was posted previously to the American Embassy in New Delhi.
“Ambassador Keshap’s appointment will reinforce the close U.S. partnership with the Government and people of India, demonstrated by our collaboration to overcome global challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic,” a statement from the State Department said.
Short and medium term vaccine access for India, U.S. assistance to India as it fought a second COVID-19 wave in recent months, and India’s manufacturing role in a Quad (India, the U.S., Australia and Japan) plan to supply at least 1 billion vaccines for Asia by the end of 2022 top the agenda of the relationship.
While the Biden administration has sent several ambassadorial nominations to the Senate, its silence on the nomination of an ambassador to New Delhi has been conspicuous.
“Keshap eminently qualified but what is the deal with the Garcetti ambassadorial appointment to India?” tweeted Paul Staniland, a University of Chicago political scientist specialising in South Asia.
Garcetti question unanswered
A U.S. Embassy spokesperson said Mr. Smith’s appointment was temporary as per the practice but it still leaves the Garcetti question unanswered.
“Ambassador Smith’s appointment was temporary, consistent with the common Department practice of appointing Chargé d’Affaires, ad interim. We thank Ambassador Smith for his extraordinary service, particularly for his leadership during an extremely challenging time in the COVID-19 pandemic, and his important contributions to the U.S.-India partnership,” the spokesperson said.
The Hindu has reached out to the White House for comment on the nomination of an Ambassador to India.
Seasoned South Asia diplomat Atul Keshap appointed next U.S. Chargé D’affaires in India
White House is yet to send to the U.S. Senate the nomination of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, whose name has been doing the rounds for the Ambassador role in New Delhi.
The U.S. State Department announced the appointment of Atul Keshap, a senior foreign service officer with years of experience in South Asia, as Chargé d’Affaires (CDA) ad interim, in New Delhi, to replace Daniel Smith, who is retiring.
Mr. Keshap’s appointment highlights the fact that the White House is yet to send to the U.S. Senate the nomination of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, whose name has been doing the rounds for the Ambassador role in New Delhi since the end of May.
Mr. Keshap was formerly the U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives and played a key role in developing the U.S.-Maldives defence relationship. The two countries signed on to a framework for their security relationship last September.
He also served as Deputy Assistance Secretary for South Asia and was posted previously to the American Embassy in New Delhi.
“Ambassador Keshap’s appointment will reinforce the close U.S. partnership with the Government and people of India, demonstrated by our collaboration to overcome global challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic,” a statement from the State Department said.
Short and medium term vaccine access for India, U.S. assistance to India as it fought a second COVID-19 wave in recent months, and India’s manufacturing role in a Quad (India, the U.S., Australia and Japan) plan to supply at least 1 billion vaccines for Asia by the end of 2022 top the agenda of the relationship.
While the Biden administration has sent several ambassadorial nominations to the Senate, its silence on the nomination of an ambassador to New Delhi has been conspicuous.
“Keshap eminently qualified but what is the deal with the Garcetti ambassadorial appointment to India?” tweeted Paul Staniland, a University of Chicago political scientist specialising in South Asia.
Garcetti question unanswered
A U.S. Embassy spokesperson said Mr. Smith’s appointment was temporary as per the practice but it still leaves the Garcetti question unanswered.
“Ambassador Smith’s appointment was temporary, consistent with the common Department practice of appointing Chargé d’Affaires, ad interim. We thank Ambassador Smith for his extraordinary service, particularly for his leadership during an extremely challenging time in the COVID-19 pandemic, and his important contributions to the U.S.-India partnership,” the spokesperson said.
The Hindu has reached out to the White House for comment on the nomination of an Ambassador to India.
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