Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
India

Indian American Keshap appointed Charge d' Affaires

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jun, 2021 11:25 AM
  • Indian American Keshap appointed Charge d' Affaires

New Delhi, June 30 (IANS) Atul Keshap, the newly appointed Charge d' Affaires at the US Embassy in India, shares very old connections with India.

"Before departure for #India, I went home to #Charlottesville to seek my Mother's blessings. She served in the #ForeignService at the US Embassy in New Delhi 1958-1960", Keshap wrote on Twitter.

Keshap most recently served as the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs and as the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives, the US State Department announced.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is said to be the next US Ambassador to India. Garcetti was rumoured to run for President in 2020, according to Los Angeles Times.

The State Department said Atul Keshap, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, will be departing for New Delhi to serve as Charge d' Affaires, ad interim, following the retirement of Ambassador Daniel Smith. Ambassador Keshap will bring a wealth of experience to the role, having served previously at US Embassy New Delhi and as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia.

"Ambassador Keshap's appointment will reinforce the close US partnership with the government and people of India, demonstrated by our collaboration to overcome global challenges like the Covid-19 pandemic", the State Department said.

As per reports, his father, Keshap Chander Sen was from Punjab and United Nations economist working in Nigeria where Keshap was born in 1971.

His mother, Zoe Calvert, had been in the U.S. Foreign Service when she met and married Sen in London. She also served at the US embassy in India.

The Keshap family home is Charlottesville, Virginia, where Keshap attended St. Anne's-Belfield School, graduating in 1988.

Keshap was posted in India in 2005 as a Deputy Minister counselor at the US embassy in New Delhi. Although he had visited India as a child, Keshap never learned Hindi until taking State Department language training, as per reports.

Across his 27-year career as an American diplomat, Keshap has served at postings in India, Morocco, and Guinea, and as United States Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives.

He has served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, as US Senior Official for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, and as an Office Director in the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs and in the Bureau of International Organization Affairs.

Keshap has negotiated or advanced bilateral and multilateral initiatives at senior levels with counterparts from the European Union, United Nations, ASEAN, APEC, and governments across the Indo-Pacific, Middle East, Africa, and North and South America.

Keshap served at the Department of Defense as the National Defense University's Vice Chancellor for the College of International Security Affairs. Earlier in his career, he served as Director for North Africa and Middle East regional affairs on the National Security Council staff in the Executive Office of the President of the United States.

Photo courtesy of Wikipedia. (US embassy)

MORE India ARTICLES

Human Rights Group Amnesty International halts work in India citing Government attacks

Human Rights Group Amnesty International halts work in India citing Government attacks
Amnesty International's latest investigations in India have focused on alleged human rights abuses in India's only Muslim-majority region, Kashmir, as well as on alleged misconduct by Indian police in last February's Delhi riots that killed dozens of mostly Muslim civilians.

Human Rights Group Amnesty International halts work in India citing Government attacks

Inauguration of a museum on river Ganga takes place on Tuesday

Inauguration of a museum on river Ganga takes place on Tuesday
The motive behind the museum is to inform visitors about the need to conserve the Ganga. 

Inauguration of a museum on river Ganga takes place on Tuesday

Shiromani Akali Dal breaks alliance with BJP led National Democratic Alliance

Shiromani Akali Dal breaks alliance with BJP led National Democratic Alliance
Addressing the media, Sukhbir Badal said SAD will continue stand by its fundamental principles of peace, harmony, and protect the interests of Punjab, Punjabis in general and Sikhs and farmers in particular.

Shiromani Akali Dal breaks alliance with BJP led National Democratic Alliance

Goonj: Dignity for work

Goonj: Dignity for work
Goonj addresses basic but neglected issues of the poor by involving them in evolving their own solutions with dignity and urban material as a reward.

Goonj: Dignity for work

India and China find middle ground on not sending troops to frontline of border

India and China find middle ground on not sending troops to frontline of border
The heightened levels of tensions are seen as unheard in recent times. A violent clash between the two countries on 15 June, left 20 dead on the Indian side and unknown number of Chinese casualties.

India and China find middle ground on not sending troops to frontline of border

India, the world's second most populous country is also the second worst hit during the COVID-19 pandemic

India, the world's second most populous country is also the second worst hit during the COVID-19 pandemic
The largest democracy in the world with 1.4 billion people has been recording the world's biggest daily increases in coronavirus cases for almost a month.

India, the world's second most populous country is also the second worst hit during the COVID-19 pandemic