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Robin Raphel probe not to US impact ties with S.Asian countries
PTI
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FILE - In this April 7, 2004 file photo, Robin Raphel, coordinator of the State Department's Office of Iraq Reconstruction, discusses the U. N.'s Oil for Food Program on Capitol Hill during an appearance before Senate Foreign Relations Committee. At right, is U. N. Ambassador John Negroponte. The State Department said Thursday, Nov. 6, 2014, that it is cooperating with a law enforcement probe into Robin Raphel, a one-time ambassador to Tunisia and most recently a senior adviser on civilian aid to Pakistan. AP
FILE - In this April 7, 2004 file photo, Robin Raphel, coordinator of the State Department's Office of Iraq Reconstruction, discusses the U. N.'s Oil for Food Program on Capitol Hill during an appearance before Senate Foreign Relations Committee. At right, is U. N. Ambassador John Negroponte. The State Department said Thursday, Nov. 6, 2014, that it is cooperating with a law enforcement probe into Robin Raphel, a one-time ambassador to Tunisia and most recently a senior adviser on civilian aid to Pakistan. AP

A federal counter intelligence probe against a former top American diplomat, who also lobbied for Pakistan post retirement, would not impact America's ties with South Asian countries, a US official has said.

"We have a range of high-level officials who work with a range of countries in this region and others every single day. We don't feel that will be impacted," the US State Department Spokesperson, Jen Psaki, told reporters at her daily news conference.

Her comments came after it was reported yesterday that the former Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Robin Raphel, one of the highest ranking female diplomats in the US, was subject of a FBI investigation.

Till early this month Raphel, 67, was a senior advisor to the State Department on civilian aid to Pakistan.

After her retirement, she had returned to the private sector and worked as a lobbyist for Pakistan.

For the past few years she had returned to the State Department as a private contractor and was advising the office of the Special Representatives for Afghanistan and Pakistan on regional issues.

During her tenure as Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia in the Clinton Administration, she had a strong view on India and on Kashmir, which was vehemently resented by India.

In New Delhi, she is seen as someone having pro-Pakistan leanings.

The FBI has searched her residence and sealed her State Department office on alleged charges of taking classified information home from the State Department. Psaki yesterday said that Raphel is no longer a State Department employee and her cont

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(Published 08 November 2014, 14:06 IST)