Aditya Sinha, the co-author of 'The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace', gives his take on the raging controversy.
The GHQ summons came late Friday night on Twitter, and on Saturday Durrani was upbeat about the matter. At the most, a Pakistani academic confided to me, Durrani, a retired three-star general, would get a 'friendly spanking'. After all, it seemed likely during our sessions - which began in Istanbul two years ago - that his "establishment" knew of the project. (In India, Dulat and I tried keeping it a secret but I suspected that National Security Advisor Ajit Doval had somehow found out.)
By Sunday evening Durrani was no longer sanguine. There has been a Twitterstorm against him for "walking into an Indian trap". Even active politicians have on social media criticised his participation in this book. The blitz against him exactly mirrors the abuse that rightwing trolls have hurled against Dulat and I: they call us anti-nationals, Pakistani agents and jihadis.
On the other hand, a section of Pakistanis have supported Durrani's efforts - #ThankYouAsadDurrani trended on twitter - for speaking unpalatable truths that they never expected to hear from deep within the establishment. Logically, he would have a constituency within the army itself.
The army, it seems, did not anticipate the intensity of the controversy, and now probably wants to keep the dam of memoirs from bursting open. Hence this action: to send a message down the line that such a book can never be the norm, just the first and last exception. It is likely that Durrani's memoir - Pakistan Adrift - that was to come out later this summer, may be withdrawn from publication, and he is likely to be told to lay low and not speak publicly. It is a setback for those of us who wanted more official openness in South Asia. Our establishments, unlike their counterparts in Western countries, are absurdly cagey.
When Durrani realised he wouldn't get a visa to India, he sent a message that we played at the beginning of the book launch. He thanked the "Indian Deep State" for not allowing him to visit, for it saved him from the "wrath of the hardliners", who without reading the book would have shouted betrayal from the rooftops. Today, we feel rotten about poor General Saheb, whose only crime was to hope for peace.
- Aditya Sinha's latest book, The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace (HarperCollins India), is available now.