Iran and Pakistan have resumed full diplomatic relations after a ten-day break spurred by air strikes in Baluchistan… and despite this weekend’s gun attack in which 9 Pakistanis died in Iran.
Image: Iran MFA/Telegram
On Saturday, 27 January, the Iranian ambassador to Pakistan, Reza Amiri Moqadam, returned to Islamabad while his Pakistani counterpart, Muhammad Mudassir Tipu, re-registered his credentials in Tehran. Both countries hope that this will put a line under serious tensions that have rocked the normally amicable relations between the two neighbouring countries following a series of cross-border air strikes earlier in January.
The immediate cause of the rift, according to Tehran, was Iran’s gripe that Islamabad had been doing far too little to rein in the Jaish al-Adl (Army of Justice), an insurgent group fighting for independence for Baluchistan—the culturally Sunni area which straddles the Iran-Pakistan-Afghanistan border. On 16 July, Iranian missiles and drones hit Koh-e-Sabz village in Pakistan’s Baluchistan Province, which Tehran implied was a base for Jaish al-Adl. However, the unilateral attack caused fury in Islamabad, which decried the lack of notice or coordination with its own security forces (Pakistan itself has suffered attacks by Jaish). Some reports suggested that two children were among up to five people who died in the attack. As a formal diplomatic complaint, Pakistan withdrew its ambassador on 17 January, refused the return of Tehran’s ambassador (for the time being), and launched retaliatory attacks the next day, with missiles landing in the eastern Iranian city of Saravan. Reports suggest between seven and nine died in what Islamabad called “precision strikes” on “terrorist hideouts” of the Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA).
Like Jaish, the BLA is also an insurgent force espousing the course of Baluch (also written Baloch) independence—a long and complex issue that can be
[1] U.S. sources strongly refute any such ideas, and American news outlets even claim that the White House had tried to send a warning of the coming attack as an “olive branch” to Tehran.
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Iran and Pakistan have resumed full diplomatic relations after a ten-day break spurred by air strikes in Baluchistan… and despite this weekend’s gun attack in which 9 Pakistanis died in Iran.