US ambassador Powell quits India job

Published April 1, 2014
Powell has resigned and will return to the United States, following a diplomatic row that strained relations between the world's biggest democracies. —Photo by Reuters
Powell has resigned and will return to the United States, following a diplomatic row that strained relations between the world's biggest democracies. —Photo by Reuters
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta (R) shakes hands with US ambassador to India Nancy Powell upon his arrival in New Delhi. —Photo by Reuters
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta (R) shakes hands with US ambassador to India Nancy Powell upon his arrival in New Delhi. —Photo by Reuters
US Secretary of State John Kerry waves in front of US Ambassador to India Nancy Powell (L) upon his arrival in New Delhi. —Photo by Reuters
US Secretary of State John Kerry waves in front of US Ambassador to India Nancy Powell (L) upon his arrival in New Delhi. —Photo by Reuters

NEW DELHI: US ambassador to India Nancy Powell resigned from her job on Monday amid local media speculation she was being eased out for Washington to start afresh on ties with New Delhi where a new government is due to take charge by mid-May.

Reports said the announcement of her resignation to her colleagues in the US mission here came a week after media reports that she may be shipped out by the Obama Administration to “clean the slate” with India. Ms Powell has been in India for less than three years.

“US Ambassador to India Nancy J Powell announced in a US Mission Town Hall meeting March 31 that she has submitted her resignation to President Obama and, as planned for some time, will retire to her home in Delaware before the end of May,” an announcement in the US Embassy website said late night on Monday.

Press Trust of India quoted embassy sources as not wanting to hazard a guess on the decision of the 67-year-old career service officer to quit her post and return home at a time when India is in an election process and Washington is also deeply interested in its outcome.

There was media speculation a week ago that Powell would be replaced with a political appointee as an attempt by the Obama administration to “clean the slate” with India.The report had said Powell had dragged her feet on meeting Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi and was perceived as being “too close” to the UPA’s foreign policy establishment.

However, when Washington decided to warm up to Modi, who is perceived as one of the front runners for the prime minister’s post, Ms Powell met Mr Modi on February 13, ending a nine-year-old boycott of the Gujarat leader on the issue of 2002 post-Godhra riots.

The US move marked a u-turn in its earlier stand of having nothing to do with Modi, whose visa it cancelled in 2005 under a domestic law on the issue of “severe violations of religious freedom”, PTI said. Ever since it had refused to review its policy.

Earlier, the EU and Britain had also ended their boycott of Mr Modi and warmed up to him in the ru-up to the polls.

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