European Union diplomats stonewalled requests from Pakistan’s army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, to be invited to attend a high-profile multilateral conference on the Indo-Pacific region in Paris last week, as well as a one-on-one meeting with the organisation’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Josep Borrell Fontelles, three diplomatic sources have confirmed to ThePrint.
General Bajwa, the sources said, also sought an invitation to the high-profile Munich Security Conference, which fell through after organisers pointed out that Pakistan’s National Security Adviser, Moeed Yusuf, was already scheduled to speak on Afghanistan.
The European Union did not respond to a request for comment from ThePrint. This report will be updated if a response is received.
Leaders from more than 30 countries in the Indian Ocean Region, including External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, attended the EU’s Indo-Pacific conference on 22 February, along with the foreign ministers of EU member states. The conference has been seen as a step towards shaping a coherent European security policy for the Indian Ocean, through which an estimated 60 per cent of its global trade transits.
Europe has faced calls to contribute more to security operations in the Indian Ocean, where only one member state, France, has a significant naval presence.
The United States has also been pushing European states to push back harder against China, with some success. Earlier this month, Germany’s foreign ministry was reported to have circulated a paper to other ministries, urging them to regard China as a “systemic rival”.
Islamabad was not invited to the conference, one European diplomatic source said, in a sign of ire over its failure to deliver on promises to rein in the Afghan Taliban, and anger over the country’s handling of Islamist protesters demanding the expulsion of France’s ambassador to protest the country’s protection of purported blasphemers.
The EU’s ambassador in Islamabad, Androulla Kaminara, had pushed for Borell to meet with General Bajwa, an Indian diplomatic source said, arguing that he represented a pro-West section of the country’s establishment, committed to containing China’s influence.
EU diplomats, however, pointed out that the meeting would be inappropriate, as Gen. Bajwa is a military officer, not a diplomatic representative of his country.
During a visit to Belgium this month, Gen. Bajwa met with the secretary-general of the European External Action Services (EEAS), Stefano Sannino, and the chairman of the European Union military committee, Claudio Graziano, the Pakistan Army’s official Inter-Services Public Relations agency announced on 18 February.
The three officials, the statement said, held discussions on the regional security situation, including Afghanistan.
The EEAS is the European Union’s diplomatic service, reporting to the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, and is tasked with executing the alliance’s foreign and security policies.
General’s mysterious visit to London
Following his European Union meetings, Gen. Bajwa made an undisclosed visit to London last week, the Indian diplomatic source said. The general and another senior officer, Inspector General for Communication & Information Technology, Lieutenant General Asif Ghafoor, stayed at the Grosvenor House hotel in central London for two days, the source said. A credible Pakistani media source also confirmed the meeting.
Even though there has been speculation that the move might have been related to tensions between Gen. Bajwa and Prime Minister Imran Khan, a leader of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League (N) told ThePrint that there had been no meeting between the army chief and the exiled Pakistani politician.
Sharif has been living in London since 2019, in the face of multiple requests from Islamabad for him to be deported home. The United Kingdom’s Home Office denied Sharif’s request for a visa extension last year, saying he had completed the medical treatment for which he had been granted entry. An immigration tribunal is set to decide on an appeal by the former prime minister later this year.
Gen. Bajwa has close personal links to the United Kingdom, which is home to his sister-in-law, Asma Bajwa, and brothers Tariq Bajwa and Javaid Bajwa.
London was also the site chosen for secret meetings in 2018 between the general’s envoy — a now-retired Inter-Services Intelligence officer from an aristocratic background — and an official of India’s Research and Analysis Wing. The meetings led to the ceasefire on the Line of Control in Kashmir last year.
(Edited by Rohan Manoj)