By IANS | Updated: Apr
04, 2017, 02.08 PM IST
UNITED
NATIONS: A Punjabi may be out of Punjab, but Punjab is never out of her.
Nikki Haley, the outspoken US ambassador to the
UN, says if she comes out sounding strong, it's because that's how she was
raised by her parents, who are Sikhs from Punjab.(india)
She
does her "job to the best of my abilities and if that comes out blunt,
comes out strong, I am one of two brothers and a sister and my parents raised
us all to be strong," she said at a news conference on Monday.
Her
father Ajit Singh Randhwa, is from Amritsar district. He is an agriculture
science professor. Her mother is Raj Kaur Randhwa.
One of her brothers, Mitti Randhwa, was an Army
officer who saw action in Operation Desert Storm, 1990-91, leading a company
tasked with finding chemical weapons.
Just
over two months into her office as the first Indian American to be appointed to
a cabinet-level position, she has made waves by calling a spade a spade, if not
a shovel, in an arena where a diplomat may delicately call it a spoon.
She has
called the UN Human Rights Council "corrupt", the UN of being a
partner of a "corrupt" government, and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
a "war criminal", and declared she was free to "beat up on
Russia".
And she perceives her job as shaking up the UN
and pulling it by its purse strings, kicking and screaming, to carry out
reforms.
A TV reporter addressed her as "Madam President" because
she presides over the Security Council this month, and quipped that's what she
may be called in eight years -- a hint that she may become the nation's
President.
Haley said that in every job she has held
"people assumed I was looking for something bigger".
But, she said, "In reality I am the
daughter of Indian parents who said to me whatever you do be great at it and
make sure people remember you for it. That's all I have ever shown, try to
be."
Haley has emerged as the face of American diplomacy
with her outspokenness and availability to the public and the media - she was
on three Sunday morning TV talk shows speaking out on US foreign policy, in
addition to a speech at the Council on Foreign relations.
Unlike most of President Donald Trump's cabinet
and top officials she has a warm relationship with the otherwise belligerent
media.
In contrast, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has kept away
from the media and minimised public appearances. Even his spokesperson, Mark
Toner, is a holdover from President Barack Obama's administration.
This makes Haley the only accessible authentic
voice of Trump foreign policy, raising her public profile.
That in turn has led to media speculation in
recent days that she is likely to succeed Tillerson.
Answering
a question if she was offered the job of Secretary of State, Haley said that
Trump did not make the offer when she met him at the Trump Tower barely two
weeks after the election in November.
But she said, "The original call that I got
to go to Trump Tower was to discuss Secretary of State."
She added, "When we went in that was the
position we were discussing."
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