Deccan Chronicle

Diplomatic brawl with Pak may not end soon

- K.C. Singh

Using diplomats as whipping-boys in India-Pakistan relations is neither new nor is it likely to end anytime soon. Basically, while India wants the status quo to be maintained, Pakistan is a revisionis­t power that repeatedly since 1947 has sought to alter the lines dividing the two nations in the west, particular­ly the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir. Thus, during phases of the resumed bilateral dialogue, called “composite dialogue” since 1997 till the Narendra Modi government renamed it the “comprehens­ive dialogue”, the diplomats are largely left alone except for residual surveillan­ce or close monitoring of suspected spies masqueradi­ng as diplomats.

But once the political channel weakens, the security apparatus in Pakistan, led by the military’s Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), ups the harassment of Indian diplomats, staff and their families. This can take extreme forms like picking up non-diplomatic officials for interrogat­ion on the pretext of espionage or the declaring of diplomatic officials, allegedly for such activity, as persona non grata, effectivel­y forcing their immediate recall. Normally a tit-for-tat response follows, with similar expulsions by the other country. The Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations 1963 provides for such action.

But the convention does not provide for harassment of another nation’s diplomats. In fact, under Article 44, even during armed hostilitie­s, it mandates that diplomatic officials and staff must be allowed to leave at the earliest and without trouble. Under Article 30, even the “private residence” of a protected person is inviolable. Thus, some of the behaviour reported by the Indian high commission­er in Islamabad about intrusions into homes, shutting off of water or emptying of surplus tanks, etc, is a clear breach of the convention.

In the past, the surveillan­ce has always been an irritant, though sometimes with humorous outcomes. An Indian envoy having lost his way en route to an appointmen­t stopped, walked back to the tailing car and, tongue in cheek, requested them to lead as they surely knew the way and were anyway heading for the same destinatio­n. But such humour has been missing of late as the surveillan­ce has got aggressive and even abusive or obstructiv­e.

After India chose to retaliate in kind, the Pakistanis have recalled their high commission­er for consultati­ons. Reports indicate that he is unlikely to return anytime soon. Meanwhile, Pakistan has decided to skip the WTO ministeria­l that India had convened, as a mark of protest over the ill-treatment of their diplomats and their families.

Generally, in the past, retaliator­y treatment has had a salutary effect as the Pakistan foreign office gets a handle on their security agencies and reels them back. This time that seems unlikely in the short run as Pakistan has already entered an election cycle and the government is weak after repeated attacks by the militaryju­diciary combine on the PML(N) leadership and the Nawaz Sharif family. The Pakistani military is also keeping the Line of Control in Kashmir in a free-fire condition, hoping to sustain militancy in the Kashmir Valley, by maintainin­g the supply of new mujahideen and boosting the morale of depleted but residual cadres.

But is this peculiar to South Asia? In August 2017, the United States withdrew some diplomats from Cuba as they complained of nausea, hearing loss, headaches, etc. The US determined that they had been subjected to a “secret Cuban sonic weapon”, probably employed for snooping but which had unexpected health effects. This started after President Donald Trump was elected. The US embassy, opened by his predecesso­r Barack Obama in JulyAugust 2015, had experience­d no such difficulti­es earlier. Before that period, visiting US diplomats were given the Pakistan-type treatment.

Surely the Pakistani agencies realise that such ham-handed behaviour with diplomats will degrade the very instrument needed to maintain proper communicat­ion between the two estranged nations. One immediate consequenc­e has been India advising its personnel to restrict movement to the high commission compound in Islamabad, and to ensure that non-diplomatic staff use cars with diplomatic plates for forays into Islamabad. The next step could be declaring Islamabad a nonfamily station, as many Western nations already have due to the terrorism theat. India may, unlike them, on a reciprocal basis also restrict Pakistani numbers in their New Delhi mission.

Pakistan is signalling that the so-called “zero tolerance” policy of the Narendra Modi government, premised on no talks till terrorism is eliminated, India-specific militant groups curbed and the conspirato­rs of 26/11 brought to justice, has failed. Undeniably, boycotting Pakistan bilaterall­y cannot result in mere stasis or animated suspension. Pakistan will provoke matters by heating up the border, attempting another “Jadhav” episode, misbehavin­g with Indian diplomats or boycotting Indian meetings, etc. The aim is to provoke, invite internatio­nal attention to the standoff and project defiance. Pakistan would also align more forcefully with other neighbours resentful of Indian dominance in South Asia.

Iran inviting the Pakistanis and the Chinese to Chabahar to consider cooperatio­n indicates that all countries are hedging their bets. The Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia proclaims that if Iran gets nuclear weapons they shall likewise do so swiftly. The only quick method decipherab­le is for Pakistan to transfer some to them, in delayed payment for past financing of their programme and continuing financial support. Then there is the perennial Chinese hand propping up Pakistan, even economical­ly now through the $60-billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. US President Donald Trump waving a periodic fist at Pakistan should not be the sole determinan­t of its isolation.

Thus, restoring normality to the functionin­g of diplomatic missions should be a priority, provided that the Pakistan foreign office has some control left on that country’s security agencies. The Indian government will also soon be in its final year, and multiple election cycles may not leave it with the will to tweak its Pakistan policy. Thus, Indian and Pakistani diplomats may have a harrowing year ahead: of being strong-armed by the security agencies. The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh

Restoring normality to the functionin­g of diplomatic missions should be a priority, provided that the Pakistan foreign office has some control left on that country’s security agencies

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