Former acting secretary of state to head US embassy in New Delhi
Daniel Smith, a former US acting secretary of state, has been appointed as the head of US embassy in New Delhi, which has been without an ambassador after Kenneth Juster left the post in January, according to State Department Spokesperson Ned Price
Daniel Smith, a former US acting secretary of state, has been appointed as the head of US embassy in New Delhi, which has been without an ambassador after Kenneth Juster left the post in January, according to State Department Spokesperson Ned Price. The appointment of Smith, who is among the seniormost career diplomats, is a measure of the importance the administration of President Joe Biden attaches to India.
Smith will hold the post of charge d'affaires ad interim – or temporarily – till an ambassador is appointed, Price announced on Friday.
“Smith’s appointment underscores the United States’ strong commitment to our partnership with the Government of India and the Indian people. He will spearhead close cooperation with India to ensure that our countries continue to advance our shared priorities, including overcoming the global pandemic,” the announcement said.
When Mike Pompeo, who was the secretary of state, and other political appointees in the top echelons of the State Department left when former President Donald Trump ended his term in January, Smith briefly took over as the acting secretary of state till Anthony Blinken was confirmed by the Senate.
Smith will take over from another career diplomat, Danie Heflin, who was appointed charge d'affaires after political appointee Juster quit when Trump left office.
Smith, who holds a PhD from Stanford University, was the director of the Foreign Service Institute that trains diplomats. Before that he had been the assistant secretary of state for intelligence and research and the ambassador to Greece.
The New Delhi ambassadorship is considered a high profile post and 15 of the 23 ambassadors have been political appointees.
They have included distinguished personalities like former governors Richard Frank Celeste and Chester Bowles (who served twice), former members of Congress including Kenneth Keating, Sherman Cooper and William Saxbe, and public intellectuals like J
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