Diplomatic illness is the practice amongst diplomats and government ministers of feigning illness, or another debilitating condition, to avoid engaging in diplomatic or social engagements.[1] The excuse of ill-health is designed to avoid formally offending the host or other parties.[2][3] The term also refers to the period during which the "diplomatic illness" is claimed to persist.
Examples
- General John J. Pershing, on his return in 1926 from unsuccessful negotiations between Peru, Bolivia and Chile and suffering from ill-health, was stated by his critics to have a "diplomatic illness".[4]
- During the Communist takeover in Czechoslovakia in 1948, foreign minister Jan Masaryk was thought to have a "diplomatic illness", as he stayed out of touch with many of his former foreign contacts.[5]
- A temporary absence of Bosnian Serb leader Ratko Mladic, at a time in 1995 when Bosnian Serb forces were withdrawing near Sarajevo under an agreement with NATO, was ascribed by some sources to "diplomatic illness".[6]
- Boris Yeltsin, the then leader of the Russian Federation, was sometimes claimed to be invoking "diplomatic illness". One occasion was in 1994 on the outbreak of the First Chechen War;[7] another coincided with a 1998 summit meeting of the Commonwealth of Independent States,[8] and another was in 1999 when he was due to sign a treaty with Belarus ian leader Alexander Lukashenko.[9] The allegations were dubious, as Yeltsin suffered from repeated genuine bouts of ill-health.[9]
- Polish leader Lech Kaczyński cited illness to avoid a Weimar Triangle meeting in the wake of a diplomatic dispute with Germany in 2006.[10]
Related terms
- William Gladstone referred to a "diplomatic cold" as an alternative to declining a social engagement outright.[7]
- Neville Chamberlain is reported to have contracted "diplomatic gout" in 1938.[7]
- Polite fiction
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