Minister Ghising holds Courtesy Meeting with US Ambassador Thompson

Kathmandu — Minister for Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation, Physical Infrastructure and Transport, and Urban Development, Kulman Ghising, held a meeting with US Ambassador to Nepal, Dean R. Thompson at Singha Durbar.

During the meeting, Ambassador Thompson congratulated the minister on his appointment and extended best wishes for a successful tenure.

Discussions focused on Nepal–US cooperation, progress of projects supported by the United States, and the reconstruction of public infrastructure damaged during the Gen-Z movement.

Minister Ghising highlighted that the government’s top priorities are the reconstruction of damaged infrastructure, conducting the upcoming general elections, and ensuring good governance.

Ambassador Thompson mentioned that America’s support to Nepal will continue.

Nepal at the crossroads of international power struggle

Kathmandu – Within hours of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s phone call to congratulate Sushila Karki on her appointment as Nepal’s interim prime minister, the Chinese and American ambassadors in Kathmandu arrived at Singha Durbar for courtesy meetings. The sequence of visits, coming from three of the world’s most influential powers, has been read in diplomatic circles as a sign that Nepal’s political shift is being closely watched far beyond its borders. For a small Himalayan nation caught between India and China and increasingly courted by the United States, such simultaneous attention is rarely accidental.

The timing alone carries geopolitical weight. India has long held a dominant influence in Nepal, bound by geography, trade and cultural ties. By reaching out first, New Delhi signaled its intent to reaffirm those links and remind Kathmandu of its historic partnership. China’s ambassador, by arriving immediately after, conveyed Beijing’s determination not to let Nepal slip further into India’s orbit. And the United States, which has invested heavily in development projects and the controversial Millennium Challenge Corporation compact, underscored that its strategic interests in South Asia extend well beyond New Delhi.

For Nepal, the sudden convergence of attention highlights the delicate balance it must maintain. Prime Minister Karki takes office at a fragile moment, with protests still fresh, elections scheduled for early next year, and the state under pressure to restore both political order and economic confidence. How her government handles these early overtures may set the tone for the next phase of Nepal’s foreign policy.

Each of the three powers has its own motives. India is anxious to keep Nepal firmly within its strategic fold, ensuring that no major infrastructure or security arrangement tilts decisively toward Beijing. It is particularly sensitive about transit routes, cross-border energy trade and unresolved border disputes. China, on the other hand, has steadily expanded its footprint in Nepal through roads, hydropower projects and Belt and Road Initiative commitments, while watching closely how Nepal manages issues linked to Tibet. The United States, meanwhile, has emphasized democracy, governance and transparency, but it also sees Nepal’s location as strategically valuable in the context of rising Chinese power in Asia.

The visits also expose the risks Nepal faces. If it leans too far toward one capital, it risks alienating another. Accepting large-scale projects without proper safeguards could saddle the country with unsustainable debt or compromise sovereignty. At the same time, failing to seize the moment could mean losing opportunities for investment, infrastructure and energy exports that the country badly needs.

President Ram Chandra Poudel recently urged unity and good governance as guiding principles for the country, and those same principles apply to foreign policy. Nepal’s challenge is to convert this influx of attention into tangible benefits without allowing itself to become a pawn in wider geopolitical rivalries. That will require clear priorities, transparent negotiation and above all a firm insistence that Nepal’s sovereignty and national interest come first.

The simultaneous outreach by India, China and the United States to Prime Minister Karki is not simply a coincidence of protocol. It is a reminder that Nepal, though small, occupies a strategic crossroads that matters deeply to the world’s major powers. How karki’s government responds could shape not only the country’s external relations but its internal stability and future trajectory.

US Ambassador Thompson meets Prime Minister Karki

Kathmandu – US Ambassador to Nepal, Dean R. Thompson, paid a courtesy visit to newly appointed Prime Minister Sushila Karki on Thursday at the Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers in Singha Durbar.

According to the Prime Minister’s Secretariat, the two discussed matters of mutual interest during the meeting. Prime Minister Karki expressed gratitude to the United States for its continued support to Nepal and voiced confidence that the assistance would carry on in the future.

On behalf of the US government, Ambassador Thompson congratulated Prime Minister Karki on her appointment and reaffirmed America’s commitment to maintain its support for Nepal with the same priority as before. Ambassador Thompson offered condolences for the lives lost in Nepal’s recent protests and reaffirmed support for Nepal’s peaceful, democratic path forward.

Meeting held between Prime Minister Deuba and US Ambassador Berry

Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and US Ambassador to Nepal Randy Berry have met at a time when the issue of ratification of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) agreement with the United States is causing a rift in the ruling coalition.

Prime Minister Deuba and Ambassador Berry held talks at the Prime Minister’s official residence in Baluwatar. Ambassador Berry was at Baluwatar to meet Deuba.

According to sources in Baluwatar, Prime Minister Deuba had talked with the ambassador about the protest caused by the rift in the ruling coalition. According to a Baluwatar source, Deuba also asked the ambassador whether there was any possibilities for reconsideration of the MCC deadline given by the United States.

After a meeting with Ambassador Berry, Prime Minister Deuba and UCPN (Maoist) Central Committee Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal discussed the issue in Baluwatar on Thursday morning.

After a discussion with Dahal in the morning, Prime Minister Deuba has postponed the meeting from 3 pm to 5 pm.