The US State Department has quietly confirmed the departure of Donald Lu, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, as his term concluded on January 17, 2025.
The announcement clarifies that Mr Lu is leaving because he completed his tenure, and is not being sacked. This move, however, is likely to be interpreted as a victory by the PTI and dismissed by the government as a routine transition.
Lu’s time in office has been tumultuous for Pakistan, marked by a political storm, with the former US diplomat becoming the proverbial eye of a political storm involving former prime minister Imran Khan, the country’s military establishment, and the current political set-up in Islamabad.
A brief announcement on the department’s official website revealed that “Mr Lu’s term ended on January 17, 2025”.
He has led the Bureau, which oversees US relations with Pakistan, since his appointment on September 15, 2021. Before this role, Mr Lu served as US Ambassador to the Kyrgyz Republic from 2018 to 2021 and Ambassador to Albania from 2015 to 2018.
The storm surrounding Mr Lu intensified in March 2022 when Imran Khan accused the US of orchestrating a ‘foreign conspiracy“ to remove him from power. Mr Khan specifically pointed to Lu, alleging that he was involved in efforts to destabilize his government. He cited a conversation between Lu and Pakistan’s then-ambassador to the US, Asad Majeed Khan, as evidence of US interference.
This conversation, known as the “Cipher” talk, was reportedly detailed in a diplomatic cable sent by Ambassador Majeed to Islamabad, and it became central to Mr Khan’s broader narrative of foreign involvement in Pakistan’s politics. The cable reportedly described the meeting between Lu and Majeed, with Mr Khan alleging that it revealed US efforts to orchestrate his ouster.
The controversy became a central issue, even though the US government vehemently denied the allegations, dismissing them as baseless.