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Counterintelligence Agents Search State Department Pakistan Expert’s Home and Office F.B.I. Is Investigating Retired U.S. Diplomat, a Pakistan Expert, Officials Say
(about 4 hours later)
WASHINGTON — Federal agents searched the home and office of a veteran State Department diplomat last month as part of a counterintelligence investigation, government officials said Friday. WASHINGTON — F.B.I. counterintelligence agents are investigating a veteran American diplomat suspected of taking classified information from the State Department home, and have searched her house and office for evidence, government officials said Friday.
The diplomat, Robin L. Raphel, is a retired ambassador and an expert on Pakistan who was working under contract as an adviser to the State Department’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. After the F.B.I. searches, Ms. Raphel was put on leave and her contract was allowed to expire. The diplomat, Robin L. Raphel, is a retired ambassador and an expert on Pakistan who until recently was an adviser to the State Department’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. The officials said that after the F.B.I. searches, Ms. Raphel was put on leave and her contract was allowed to expire.
Jen Psaki, the State Department spokeswoman, said in a statement that the department “is cooperating with our law enforcement colleagues on this matter.” The nature of the investigation is unclear, but officials said the F.B.I. was trying to determine why Ms. Raphel appears to have brought classified information home, and whether she had passed, or was planning to pass, the information to a foreign government.
“Ms. Raphel’s appointment expired,'’ the statement said. “She is no longer a Department employee.” F.B.I. counterintelligence agents have a broad mandate including tracking foreign spies inside the United States, investigating American citizens suspected of spying for other nations, and examining the mishandling of classified information.
The nature of the investigation is unclear. F.B.I. counterintelligence agents track spies and look for signs of economic espionage or mishandling of classified documents. The American officials who confirmed the counterintelligence investigation did not say whether Ms. Raphel is the target. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it. The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigation, did not give details about why they were examining Ms. Raphel’s activities. Nor did say whether she was officially a target of the investigation.
“She has not been told that she is the target,” said Andrew Rice, Ms. Raphel’s spokesman. “Her nearly 40 years of public service at the highest levels of U.S. diplomacy speak for themselves. I’m confident this will be resolved.” It is extremely rare for the F.B.I. to open a counterintelligence investigation into such a prominent Washington figure. 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 Ms. Raphel’s ability in the future to operate within American diplomatic circles. One official said on Friday that Ms. Raphel had been stripped of her security clearances as part of the investigation.
Jen Psaki, the State Department spokeswoman, said in a statement that the department was “cooperating with our law enforcement colleagues on this matter.”
“Ms. Raphel’s appointment expired,” Ms. Psaki said. “She is no longer a department employee.”
Andrew Rice, a spokesman for Ms. Raphel, said that she had not been informed whether she was a target of the investigation, adding that “her nearly 40 years of public service at the highest levels of U.S. diplomacy speak for themselves.”
“I’m confident this will be resolved,” Mr. Rice said.
The Washington Post first reported the investigation on its website Thursday night.The Washington Post first reported the investigation on its website Thursday night.
Ms. Raphel, 67, is well known in Washington foreign policy circles and among the State Department’s highest-ranking female diplomats. She served as ambassador to Tunisia and as assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs in the Clinton administration. Ms. Raphel, 67, is a fixture in Washington foreign policy circles and is one of the State Department’s highest-ranking female diplomats. She served as ambassador to Tunisia and as assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs in the Clinton administration. The September 11 Commission interviewed Ms. Raphel about her experiences dealing with Pakistan’s government and about her official meetings with the Afghan Taliban.
Ms. Raphel retired from the Foreign Service in 2005 and in 2009 was hired by the American Embassy in Pakistan to help administer billions of dollars of development aid to the country. She returned to Washington in 2011 to work as a senior adviser on Pakistan issues. According to the commission’s report, Ms. Raphel “noted how Washington used one ideology, radical Islam, to defeat another, communism, in Afghanistan.”
Ms. Raphel is the former wife of Arnold Raphel, who was serving as the American ambassador to Pakistan in 1988 when he was killed in a mysterious plane crash with Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, the president of Pakistan at the time. There are numerous theories about the cause of the crash, including one that it was an assassination and that nerve gas in a canister hidden in a crate of mangoes was dispersed in the plane’s air-conditioning system. “This, she cautioned, while successful in the short run, came back to haunt the U.S.,” the report said. “As a result, policy makers should consider the dangers when working with highly ideological movements.”
After her retirement and before her work at the embassy, Ms. Raphel worked for Cassidy & Associates, a firm that did lobbying work for the government of Pakistan. Ms. Raphel retired from the Foreign Service in 2005 and joined Cassidy & Associates, a firm that has done lobbying work for the government of Pakistan.
In 2009, the American Embassy in Pakistan hired her to help administer billions of dollars of development aid to the country. She returned to Washington in 2011 as a senior adviser on Pakistan issues for the State Department’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.
In 1988, Ms. Raphel’s former husband, Arnold L. Raphel, then the American ambassador to Pakistan, was killed in a mysterious plane crash with Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-Haq, the president of Pakistan. There are numerous theories about the cause of the crash, including that it was an assassination and that nerve gas in a canister hidden in a crate of mangoes was dispersed in the plane’s air-conditioning system.
News of the investigation into Ms. Raphel was greeted with apprehension in Islamabad, where she is viewed by many as one of the few American officials sympathetic toward Pakistan’s government, which has had a turbulent relationship with Washington since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. There was even speculation that Pakistan’s adversaries — whether Indian officials or powerful Indian-Americans living in the United States — had played a part in helping to open the investigation.
Najam Sethi, a political analyst and talk-show host on GEO TV, said Ms. Raphel “was friendly toward Pakistan, a reason she was disliked in India.”
“This is not a good development for Pakistan,” he said.