Biden selects William Burns as head of CIA
WASHINGTON: US Presidentelect Joe Biden has named William Burns, a long-time member of the foreign service and chief of Carnegie International Endowment for Peace, to head the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Burns has been a strong supporter of India-US relations and had played a key role in the signing of the bilateral civil nuclear deal. That landmark agreement of 2008 ended India’s nuclear isolation in the world.
As Biden’s top spy and member of the national security team, Burns will play a role in shaping US ties with India in the incoming administration. In a statement announcing the nomination, Biden pointed to Burns’s long years in diplomacy. “Bill Burns is an exemplary diplomat with decades of experience on the world stage keeping our people and our country safe and secure. He shares my profound belief that intelligence must be apolitical and that the dedicated intelligence professionals serving our nation deserve our gratitude and respect.”
Here is what he wrote about his role in the signing of the nuclear deal, in an article in February 2020: “I was the diplomat charged with completing US-India civil-nuclear deal in the summer and fall of 2008. Selling the agreement in international forums was mostly an exercise in blunt-force diplomacy, with little of the practised finesse that so often consumes profession.
“I have sheepish memories of waking senior European officials in the middle of the night to obtain an exception for India from the Nuclear Suppliers Group. I didn’t belabour the technical arguments, nor did I really try to do much convincing.”