Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

We Resolved Tough Issues; No Place For Complacency: US Envoy Richard Verma's Parting Message

IANS, 20 Jan, 2017 12:09 PM
    A day before he demits office, US Ambassador to India Richard Verma, on Thursday underlined how the two countries resolved some "tough issues" during his tenure, including nuclear liability, even as he cautioned against being "complacent".
     
    Terming cross-border terrorism a "serious threat", Mr Verma said it is not for "anyone's lack of effort" that perpetrators of terrorist attacks continue to roam free in Pakistan, whose leaders, he said, have been addressed in "serious terms". 
     
    He was speaking at an event at Foreign Correspondents' Club in Delhi in his last public engagement in India in his present capacity.
     
    Asked about the appointments being made by the incoming administration, he said, "As optimistic as I am, I don't want to be complacent. We had to really solve some tough issues in trade, nuclear liability. We've got to keep working at it."
     
    48-year-old Verma, who is of Indian origin, will quit before President-elect Donald Trump assumes charge as his team said the envoys, who are political appointees, will not be given any "grace period" beyond Trump's inauguration day.
     
    Asked about the unfinished trials of 2008 Mumbai terror attacks and the menace of terrorism, Mr Verma said it was a "very vexing" problem and the top-most threat that confronts the US, India and the people of Pakistan.
     
     
    "It is a scourge that we have to stand up against collectively. No one nation can do it own its own. The challenge of cross border terrorism has been a serious threat and one that we have condemned and addressed in serious terms with leaders in Pakistan.
     
    "We have to continue to work with this. Our security partnership has greatly enhanced, we share more intelligence now. This will require all elements of our national power including countering extremist messages. It's not for a lack of effort on anyone's part," he said.
     
    Mr Verma said the dominant view in Washington was that Indo-US ties were a "non-partisan" endeavour, which he said was on a upward trajectory.
     
    "We are joined together by deep shared values. I have a lot of reason to be optimistic. We have demonstrated to the people that this a relationship that really does help people," he said, hoping the new President would take it forward.
     
    Touching upon the concerns expressed by many on "erosion" of diversity in US, Verma narrated the experiences of his own family, especially his mother, and affirmed "that is the American dream I will continue to cherish, celebrate and protect."
     
    "We have confronted such doubts and headwinds in the past...and the American ideals upon which our country was founded have always prevailed - they will do so again. It will require a resolve, and a commitment to speak up for those who may need a helping hand," he said.
     
     
    Mr Verma, who had assumed charge as the 25th US Ambassador to India in January 2015, had played a key role in the Congressional passage of the civil nuclear deal and is a strong advocate of closer ties between the two countries.
     
    He had succeeded Nancy Powell, who resigned in March 2014 in the backdrop of a diplomatic row over the treatment meted out to Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade in the US.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian American Teen Crushes Indian Woman In Miami To Death With Truck, Arrested

    Indian American Teen Crushes Indian Woman In Miami To Death With Truck, Arrested
    Madhav Sood, was arrested earlier this month for crushing to death another Indian, Florida resident Priya Pachauri, while racing his pickup truck.

    Indian American Teen Crushes Indian Woman In Miami To Death With Truck, Arrested

    Man Pulled Out Gun, Shot Himself At B.C. Hospital ER: Nurses' Union

    Man Pulled Out Gun, Shot Himself At B.C. Hospital ER: Nurses' Union
    BURNABY, B.C. — The union representing B.C. nurses says staff at a hospital in Grand Forks are traumatized after a man walked into an emergency room, pulled out a gun and shot himself Thursday evening.

    Man Pulled Out Gun, Shot Himself At B.C. Hospital ER: Nurses' Union

    Indian American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi To Serve On Two Influential House Panels

    Indian American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi To Serve On Two Influential House Panels
    Indian American Raja Krishnamoorthi, who was sworn in as a Member of the US House of Representatives earlier this month, has said he would be serving on two influential committees.

    Indian American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi To Serve On Two Influential House Panels

    Pak Army Using Pashtun Women As Sex Slaves, Claims Separatist Community Leader

    Pak Army Using Pashtun Women As Sex Slaves, Claims Separatist Community Leader
    In a startling revelation, Umar Daud Khattak, a separatist Pashtun leader, has shockingly alleged that the Pakistan Army is using Pashtun women as sex slaves. 

    Pak Army Using Pashtun Women As Sex Slaves, Claims Separatist Community Leader

    Turkey Arrests 2 Chinese Nationals Over Nightclub Attack

    Turkey Arrests 2 Chinese Nationals Over Nightclub Attack
    Turkey has arrested two Chinese nationals of Uighur origin in connection with a mass shooting in a nightclub in Istanbul on New Year's Eve claimed by the ISIS group, media reports said.

    Turkey Arrests 2 Chinese Nationals Over Nightclub Attack

    Girl, 12, Livestreams Her Own Suicide After She Was 'Sexually Abused By A Relative'

    Girl, 12, Livestreams Her Own Suicide After She Was 'Sexually Abused By A Relative'
    Video of a 12-year-old US girl's suicide broadcast live has gone viral around the world, and local police say they're unable to do anything about it.

    Girl, 12, Livestreams Her Own Suicide After She Was 'Sexually Abused By A Relative'