Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
International

Why is India-baiter Robin Raphel under FBI scanner?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Nov, 2014 10:24 AM
    Controversial veteran American diplomat Robin Raphel, under FBI scanner as part of an anti-spying probe, was suspected of taking classified information home from the State Department, according to media reports.
     
    Citing unnamed officials, The New York Times said the FBI was trying to determine why Raphel apparently brought classified information home, and whether she had passed, or was planning to pass, the information to a foreign government.
     
    In October FBI agents searched the home and State Department offices of Raphel, who had raised the hackles of the Indian establishment in the 1990s by describing Jammu and Kashmir as "disputed territory" and her lobbying for separatists there.
     
    Raphel, who was appointed as the first assistant secretary of state for South Asia in 1993 by then President Bill Clinton, also sided with Sikh separatists.
     
    She "was seen in New Delhi as a catalyst for Washington trafficking with India's enemies," according to a 1994 Los Angles Times report cited by Wikipedia.
     
    At the time of the raid, she was serving as a senior adviser on Pakistan for the office of the special representative on Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2011.
     
    In that job, she was chiefly responsible for administering non-military aid such as US economic grants and incentives, according to The Washington Post which first reported the story.
     
    The Times said officials did not give details about why they were examining Raphel's activities. Nor did they say whether she was officially a target of the investigation.
     
    "Raphel is a fixture in Washington foreign policy circles and is one of the State Department's highest-ranking female diplomats," the influential US daily noted.
     
    "It is extremely rare for the FBI to open a counterintelligence investigation into such a prominent Washington figure," it said.
     
    "Any decision by the Justice Department to open the inquiry would have had to take into account that an investigation - whatever its outcome - will have a lasting impact on Raphel's ability in the future to operate within American diplomatic circles," the Times said.
     
    Raphel was stripped of her security clearances as part of the investigation and relieved of her duties at the State Department.
     
    Spokesperson Jen Psaki said the department was "cooperating with our law enforcement colleagues on this matter."
     
    Raphel, 67, who started her career as an analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had also served as Political Counsellor in New Delhi.
     
    A former ambassador to Tunisia, she had also served in Pakistan during her 30-year-long career.
     
    Raphel retired from the Foreign Service in 2005 and joined Cassidy & Associates, a firm that has done lobbying work for the government of Pakistan, according to the Times.
     
    In 2009, the American Embassy in Pakistan hired her to help administer billions of dollars of development aid to the country.
     
    In 1988, Raphel's former husband, Arnold L. Raphel, then the American ambassador to Pakistan, was killed in a mysterious plane crash with Pakistan president Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-Haq.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Brother, former husband arrested in Pakistan honour killing case

    Brother, former husband arrested in Pakistan honour killing case
    The former husband and brother of the 25-year-old pregnant Pakistani woman, Farzana, who was brutally stoned to death for marrying the man of her choice, were arrested Wednesday, a media report said.

    Brother, former husband arrested in Pakistan honour killing case

    India treated Nawaz Sharif like a schoolboy: Imran Khan

    India treated Nawaz Sharif like a schoolboy: Imran Khan
    Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf chairman Imran Khan Monday said Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was treated like a schoolboy when he visited India to attend Narendra Modi's swearing-in ceremony last week.

    India treated Nawaz Sharif like a schoolboy: Imran Khan

    Gunmen kidnap Indian national in Afghanistan

    Gunmen kidnap Indian national in Afghanistan
    Unidentified gunmen Monday kidnapped an Indian national in western Afghanistan's Herat province, an official said.

    Gunmen kidnap Indian national in Afghanistan

    Diwali and Eid to be declared Holiday in Britain?

    Diwali and Eid to be declared Holiday in Britain?
    An online petition to the British House of Commons has urged the politicians to create a bank holiday for Hindu Diwali and Muslim Eid festival in the country, a media report said.

    Diwali and Eid to be declared Holiday in Britain?

    American Embassy School in crisis after Devyani Khobragade row

    American Embassy School in crisis after Devyani Khobragade row
    The American Embassy School (AES) in New Delhi's plush diplomatic enclave is deep in crisis after nearly 40 teachers quit as a fallout of last year's India-US diplomatic row.

    American Embassy School in crisis after Devyani Khobragade row

    Last US prisoner of war Bowe Bergdahl freed in Afghanistan, swapped for 5 Taliban detainees

    Last US prisoner of war Bowe Bergdahl freed in Afghanistan, swapped for 5 Taliban detainees
    A US soldier seized by the Taliban nearly five years ago in Afghanistan has been released after five Taliban leaders held in Guantanamo Bay were let off, US and Taliban officials said.

    Last US prisoner of war Bowe Bergdahl freed in Afghanistan, swapped for 5 Taliban detainees