"(In) mentioned India after their elections, religious freedom has slipped in that country.
"We need to be watching very closely what's happening not just with Christians but all religious minorities there in that country," Tony Perkins, president of the Washington-based Christian conservative group Family Research Council told a Senate sub-committee during a Congressional hearing on Wednesday.
"Our training for our Foreign Service officers is to be a priority," said Perkins.
Notably in 2010, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) classified Family Research Council as an anti-gay hate group, a designation which generated controversy.
"In your view has the current administration shown more clarity on issues of religious freedom?" Senator Steve Danes asked Senator Perkins.
"In my conversations (with diplomats), this (religious freedom) has never been a topic that is brought up to them as a priority in our foreign policy; in fact, it's been contrary.
"As a result, we see record levels of religious persecution.
"And according to the experts that track this, it's not about to crest, it's continuing to rise and the foreseeable future does not look good," he added.
Citing the speech by US President Barack Obama in Siri Fort in New Delhi this January, Rabbi David Nathan Saperstein, Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom at the Department of States, argued that religious freedom is a key part of the Administration's foreign policy.
"Whether it is a change or just different things going on at the same time, I actually think that there is a legitimate narrative that says that this is an administration and a secretary of State and a president that cares deeply about this issue of religious freedom," Saperstein said.
