The Sunday Guardian

Verma likely to end his indian assignment as trump starts term on 20 Jan

- IANS

NEW YORK: US President Barack Obama’s appointee as ambassador to India, Richard Verma, may be ending his New Delhi assignment this month when President-elect Donald Trump takes over on 20 January if an administra­tion directive to non-career diplomats holds. The Washington Post reported that the Obama administra­tion has asked all “non-career ambassador­s to submit their resignatio­ns effective with the close of the Obama presidency” on January 20. The newspaper quoted three unidentifi­ed officials as confirming that all the ambassador­s have complied with the directive. While requests for resignatio­ns by non-career diplomats are usually made at the end of a President’s term, they are usually given some additional time to wind up their affairs. This time there was “the additional admonition that the resignatio­ns would be blanket and final,” the newspaper said. The Post said according to two officials “the unusually stern and specific directive to ‘political ambassador­s’” came at the “behest of the incoming Trump administra­tion.” Verma, a non-career diplomat, is the first person of Indian descent to be ambassador to India. He did not come up the ranks of the Foreign Service but was recruited in 2009 to be the Assistant Secretary of State for Legislativ­e Affairs under Hillary Clinton when she was the Secretary of State. He left the State Department in 2011 to work for a law firm before being appointed ambassador to India in 2014. His nomination received unanimous support from both parties in the Senate.

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