Arab Times

US special envoy to Pakistan, Kabul to leave

Clinton thanks Grossman for building ‘a diplomatic surge’

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WASHINGTON, Nov 30, (AFP): The US special envoy to Afghanista­n and Pakistan is stepping down, an official said recently, in yet another shake-up of President Barack Obama’s foreign policy team.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, herself set to leave office early next year, had pulled envoy Marc Grossman out of retirement to take on the difficult job shortly after the sudden death of veteran diplomat Richard Holbrooke in December 2010.

“After almost two years in the position, and with Secretary Clinton’s agreement, he will return to private life,” Grossman’s spokeswoma­n Laura Lucas told AFP in a statement.

Clinton thanked Grossman for building “a diplomatic surge” and an intense global focus which “have put in place a network of regional and internatio­nal support for Afghanista­n post 2014 and into the next decade,” Lucas added.

“His work also helped set the conditions for an Afghan peace process that will enable Afghans to talk with other Afghans in pursuit of a negotiated settlement to end decades of conflict.”

Grossman, 61, has travelled relentless­ly in the region, and his behind-the-scenes efforts helped persuade Pakistan to reopen its border crossings with Afghanista­n to NATO convoys earlier this year. They had been closed amid a row over the killing of 24 Pakistani troops in a US air strike.

His work over the past two years had also supported Obama’s “objectives to disrupt and defeat al-Qaeda and ensure that Afghanista­n can no longer become a safe haven for terrorists,” Lucas added.

Grossman will step down next month and ambassador David Pearce, currently principal deputy special representa­tive, will serve as the acting special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan.

Grossman served at the US embassy in Pakistan from 1977 to 1979 and rose steadily through the ranks of the US Foreign Service. He also assisted Holbrooke in the Dayton peace talks that ended the Bosnian war.

He also served as undersecre­tary of state for political affairs — the top position for a career diplomat — from 2001 to 2005, when he faced the tough challenge of mending US relationsh­ips overseas during the Iraq war.

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