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A senior State Department official has resigned amid reports that she embellished her résumé with bogus academic accomplishments and created a fake Time magazine cover with her face on it.

Mina Chang, 35, the former deputy assistant secretary in the State Department’s Bureau of Conflict and Stability Operations, listed a nonexistent degree from the University of Hawaii and claimed to be an “ambassador” for the UN’s cultural agency UNESCO, NBC News reported.

She also misrepresented a trip to Afghanistan as a humanitarian mission and listed an academic who said he never worked for her nonprofit as a staffer, according to the network.

In her resignation letter, Chang denied all the allegations.

“It is essential that my resignation be seen as a protest and not as surrender because I will not surrender my commitment to serve, my fidelity to the truth, or my love of country,” she wrote to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

“Indeed, I intend to fight for those things as a citizen in the days and years to come,” she wrote, adding that she had been “unfairly maligned, unprotected by my superiors, and exposed to a media with an insatiable desire for gossip and scandal, genuine or otherwise.”

According to NBC News, Chang made up a role on a UN panel and claimed she had addressed both the Democratic and the Republican national conventions.

Chang, who assumed her post in April, was being considered for an even bigger government job with a budget of over $1 billion until Congress began asking questions about her résumé.

Chang had painted her 2015 trip to Afghanistan as a humanitarian mission for her charity, Linking the World, but a defense contractor paid the bill and no aid was delivered, NBC News reported, citing documents from the company and a former employee.

After her trip, Chang posted photos of herself meeting a group of Afghan women in a room.

Mina Chang’s fake Time magazine coverMina Chang’s fake Time magazine cover

In a video posted on her charity’s website, she refers to the image and claims the women are “in hiding” at a secret location.

“This is in Afghanistan, I am sitting with women in our program, they are living in hiding. I can only say they are right outside of the Kabul area,” Chang says in an interview posted on her nonprofit’s website.

But the women were actually the wives of local employees of the defense contractor that paid for her trip, Automotive Management Services, and had not been in hiding, a former employee told the network.

“They were photo-ops,” the former worker said of Chang’s trip to Afghanistan and another one to Iraq.

On her charity’s website, Chang posted pictures from the Afghanistan trip, without saying the defense contractor footed the bill for the visit and that her nonprofit conducted no aid work during the visit.

In an email to NBC News, Chang said her group was helping the defense contractor “create shared value” in Afghanistan.

“Our work was not ‘humanitarian aid,’ it was to help a company with critical presence on the ground incorporate [creating shared value] into their business model,” she said.

Ian Dailey, Linking the World’s chief of staff, did not respond to a request for comment by NBC about the defense contractor’s sponsorship of Chang’s trip.

Linking the World lists in its promotional material a “chief data scientist,” Michel Leonard, an adjunct professor at New York University and Columbia University, who told NBC News that “I was never an employee of this organization.”

Dailey told NBC News in an email, “Linking the World is a volunteer-based organization, so no persons addressed on our site were employees. At the time, Mr. Leonard was employed by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), and I was personally working with him on a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the two organizations, to share data, skills and analyzes [sic]. However, Mr. Leonard left USIP before that MOU was completed.”

Chang also denied creating or commissioning the faux Time cover, which appeared onscreen with her during a 2017 interview in which she discussed effort to suppress the influence of groups such as ISIS and Boko Haram.

Mina ChangDepartment of StateMina ChangDepartment of State

When the show’s host suggested that they “take a look at some pictures you brought with you of your work around the world,” the magazine cover flashed across the screen with a headline reading, “We change the world: Modern humanitarian in the digital age.”

“Here you are on Time magazine, congratulations,” host Mary Sit said, according to the Washington Post. “Tell me about this cover and how this came to be.”

Chang explained that her group used “drone technology in disaster response,” adding, “I suppose I brought some attention to that.”

But Chang told NBC News that she hadn’t brought the magazine cover with her that day and that she was “surprised by its appearance during the interview,” though she conceded that she “should have taken the opportunity to clarify” that it was not real.

The fake cover was reminiscent of a faked Time magazine cover dated March 1, 2009, hanging in several of President Trump’s clubs in 2017. “Donald Trump: The ‘Apprentice’ is a television smash!” the headline read.

“We couldn’t comment on the decor at Trump Golf clubs one way or another,” former White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders wrote in an email to the Washington Post at the time.

In her State Department bio, Chang also claimed that she is “an alumna of the Harvard Business School.”

But the Harvard program she completed was not the prestigious school’s master of business administration degree.

She attended an eight-week course known as the “Advanced Management Program,” Harvard Business School spokesman Brian Kenny told the Washington Post.

Chang claimed she never professed to have a degree from the school. She also defended her assertion that she spoke to both the Republican and Democratic National Conventions in 2016, but she did not appear at convention-sponsored events.

She addressed the Global Oval, an international affairs policy summit convened during both conventions in the cities where they were held, according to the newspaper.

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