As is widely known, the status of the Republic of China, or for short Taiwan, is currently perceived in various ways by individual members of the international community. For most of the states of the world who maintain diplomatic relations with the government of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), Taiwan is formally considered a “province”, i.e., a nonsovereign substate unit within the PRC. From the theoretical point of view, Taiwan probably cannot be seen as a “typical” province, but rather, it is an entity
On the whole, a sufficient quantity of contemporary academic literature in the field of international relations is dedicated to the issue of Taiwan’s foreign relations For example, in Scopus database, we can find approximately twenty studies, books and book chapters published in the last five years which are dealing (based on abstracts and key words) with various issues and questions of Taiwan's foreing policy.
In the first section of this work, dedicated to the theoretical definition of diplomacy and paradiplomacy, we could draw on a rather wide range of various specialist works, from which we especially used monographs, as well as encyclopedic works and studies, by renowned Slovak, Czech, and particularly foreign authors specializing in the field of diplomacy. However, for the other sections of the work, where we specifically dealt with the issues of the practical performance of Taiwan’s foreign activities, due to the previously mentioned lack of academic literature on this topic, we also had to draw information from other sources, along with the few relevant academic studies. Among those were official documents, especially the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China (Taiwan), Taiwan’s foreign representations, and diplomatic missions of other states. Extraordinarily valuable information was provided through personal communication with the staff of various diplomatic bodies (e.g., Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in the Slovak Republic) and foreign representations of Taiwan (e.g., Taipei Representative Office in Bratislava).
The purpose of this study is to familiarize the reader with the specific character of Taiwan’s activities in international relations from the viewpoint of the practical performance of its foreign activities. At the same time, it also aims to compare the diplomatic and quasidiplomatic or paradiplomatic activities of Taiwan, especially with emphasis on their institutional backgrounds, legal regulations, and other conditions for their practical performance.
Given the fact that the notions of diplomacy and paradiplomacy, with which we are going to work, are in the contemporary theory of international relations interpreted in diverse ways and used in different contexts, the first section of this study will be dedicated to a brief definition of both these notions and, subsequently, to the explanation of their usage in relation to the foreign activities of Taiwan. In the second section of the study, we shall briefly outline the beginnings of Taiwan’s foreign activities and the unique circumstances of its entry onto the international political scene, which are closely related to the specific character of its current foreign activities. In the third section, we shall deal with the description and analysis of the particular forms of Taiwan’s foreign activities, with emphasis on their institutional background, organization, legal regulation, and other practical aspects of their performance. As this study focuses primarily on the questions of the practical performance of Taiwan’s foreign activities, other questions related to this issue, such as Taiwan’s international legal status or the definition of the notion of sovereignty, will not be the objects of more detailed scrutiny. Nor will Taiwan’s activities in relation to continental China (PRC) be the object of deeper scrutiny, as, although they can also be considered a certain type of “external” activity, given their specific character, they would require a more comprehensive analysis.
The terms “diplomacy” and “paradiplomacy” in contemporary academic sources are used with several relatively different meanings, which is why it is necessary to at least briefly explain them.
The notion of “diplomacy” in its modern sense, as the administration of international affairs through negotiations, first came to be used in the eighteenth century. At the time, the term “diplomacy” was associated almost exclusively with the state. It was only in the course of the twentieth century that the use of the term diplomacy also spread to the activities of international intergovernmental organizations, and currently, this word is sometimes even used in regard to the involvement of various other nongovernmental entities, such as supranational corporations, in international relations. Here, it is necessary to remark that the use of the term diplomacy in relation to activities of entities other than the state is not accepted universally in contemporary academic sources or in diplomatic practice. Among nonstate actors, a relatively wide level of acceptance of the word “diplomacy” may probably only be observed in relation to international intergovernmental organizations, and also perhaps the Holy See. It is possible to theoretically justify the use of this term in relation to the external activities of international intergovernmental organizations by the fact that the activities of international intergovernmental organizations in international relations just represent a different, mediated form of promotion of states’ foreign policy interests. It is possible to confirm this by considering that international intergovernmental organizations serve their member states and are founded for carrying out their member states’ joint interests. In connection with the international organizations’ right of active legation, Rosputinský (2015, 99) correctly remarks that the primary purpose of the work of an international organization with respect to external actors is not the promotion of its own interests, but the achievement of the joint interests of its member states.
When defining the term diplomacy in this study, we shall base it on its “traditional” and, at the same time, the most universally accepted use, i.e., we shall define it in relation to the state. As far as we associate the notion of diplomacy with the state, we can distinguish several of its basic meanings.
In academic sources, as well as in diplomatic practice, the word “diplomacy” is most commonly understood as the tool or process for the promotion of a state’s foreign policy interests through negotiation or other nonviolent means (with the exception of the means of international law). Methods of international law, including, e.g., solving of disputes before an international court, are – as a rule – considered a separate tool of performance of the state’s foreign policy.
It is important to know, however, that there are also other “state-related” meanings of the term diplomacy in the present international relations theory. For example, the term diplomacy is sometimes used also as a synonym for the state’s foreign policy itself. It needs to be said, however, that such an interpretation of diplomacy does not appear to be very suitable, because, as correctly noted by G. R. Berridge and A. James (2003, 70), it results in the blurring of the important difference between the content of the foreign policy goals of the state (foreign policy) and the form of the promotion of these goals (diplomacy), while diplomacy, as P. Widmer (2014, 26) emphasized in this context, is only one of several tools that the state may use to promote its foreign policy goals. In another sense, in some cases, the term diplomacy also means the whole complex of international political interactions between states over a certain period of time and/or geographical region or even international relations as a whole (Veselý 2014, 9). In some sources, we can also find the use of the term diplomacy in the sense of the Foreign Service, i.e., the diplomatic apparatus of the state and its diplomatic activity (see, e.g., Widmer 2014, 25).
The term “paradiplomacy” began to be used in political science terminology in the second half of the 1980s as a denomination for – in that time, dynamically developing – activities of substate (regional) administrative entities in the international political arena (e.g., Aguirre 1999, 185; Kuznetsov 2015, 27). It is also in this sense that the notion of paradiplomacy is mostly used today, but its precise, more particular definition varies slightly across individual academic sources. In this regard, we can remark that in some parts of academic literature, the notion of paradiplomacy is exclusively connected with the foreign activities of regional administrative units of a “higher level”, such as provinces, federal republics, and counties or states of a federation (see, e.g., Wolff 2007), while in other parts of the academic literature, paradiplomacy is associated with foreign activities of all substate administrative units, i.e., not only regional units of a “higher level” but also cities and villages (e.g., Duchacek 1990; Drulák et al. 2004; Kleiner 2010). Similarly, we can also find various interpretations of the term paradiplomacy as far as the target subjects are concerned, in relation to whom these activities may be carried out. While in a part of the academic sources, paradiplomacy only covers the activities of substate units carried out in relation to analogous (substate) actors abroad (e.g., Hubinger 2006), in other works, the term paradiplomacy includes also the foreign activities of substate units, carried out in relation to foreign states, i.e., toward central governments (e.g., Duchacek 1988).
The term paradiplomacy, thus, could be generally defined as a set of foreign activities of a nonsovereign substate regional unit, which are carried out with the goal of promoting the latter’s interests in relation to other, analogous substate entities abroad, as well as in relation to foreign states and international organizations. We would like to add that in a smaller part of specialist literature also, some other designations tend to be used as an equivalent of the term paradiplomacy, such as
If we take the above-mentioned definitions of diplomacy and paradiplomacy as our point of departure, we can say that foreign activities of Taiwan display, dependent on the conditions of their performance, characteristic features of both. When Taiwan carries out foreign activities in relation to foreign states with which it has diplomatic relations, it can, in the performance thereof, act as a sovereign state, and in such a case, its foreign activities may be designated as diplomatic. On the contrary, when Taiwan carries out foreign activities in relation to foreign states with which it does not have diplomatic relations (because these states maintain diplomatic relations with the PRC), it formally acts in their performance as only a province of the PRC, i.e., a nonsovereign substate unit; in such a case, we may designate these foreign activities as paradiplomatic.
In order to understand the peculiar contemporary character of Taiwan’s foreign activities, it is first necessary, at least briefly, to elucidate the specifics of Taiwan’s entrance onto the international political scene.
We can speak about the beginnings of Taiwan’s activities as an actor in international relations from the time when, after the communists’ victory in the Chinese Civil War, the PRC was declared in 1949. The government of the Republic of China then left the continental part of China, controlled by communists, for the island of Taiwan, which remained (together with several smaller nearby islands) the only territory under its control. Simultaneously, even after the transfer to Taiwan, the government of the Republic of China continued to fulfill its normal executive role, which also included the maintenance of official diplomatic contacts with foreign states and participation in activities within international intergovernmental organizations, including, e.g., the UN. Understandably, the new communist government of the PRC in Beijing started to make an effort to establish diplomatic contacts of its own and, furthermore, it began to make clear to foreign governments that it considered itself “the sole legal government representing all the people” (Proclamation of the Central People’s Government of the PRC 1986) of China. It was an unequivocal message to the governments of foreign states that they had to choose whether to maintain official diplomatic relations with the PRC government in Beijing or with the government of the Republic of China in Taiwan. In diplomatic practice, this meant that when establishing diplomatic relations with any foreign state, the PRC insisted that this state cut off or/and will not establish “parallel” diplomatic relations with the Republic of China in Taiwan. Several states that had established diplomatic relations with the PRC – and consequently could not maintain diplomatic relations with Taiwan – at least wanted to also maintain a certain form of nondiplomatic contact with the Taipei government. This was especially due to pragmatic reasons, as this government effectively controlled the whole territory of the island of Taiwan. For example, Great Britain, which was the first among the “Western” powers to establish diplomatic relations with the PRC in 1950, continued to maintain consular relations Consular relations are a specific type of relations among states that can be established and/or maintained independently from the existence or nonexistence of diplomatic relations between them. Thus, consular relations can be regarded as a kind of essentially nondiplomatic relations. In a joint communiqué of the governments of Great Britain and the PRC of March 13, 1972, Great Britain, “acknowledging the position of the Chinese Government that Taiwan is the province of the People’s Republic of China”, undertook to close down its consulate in Tamsui in Taiwan as of March 13, 1972 (Joint Communiqué of the Governments of the United Kingdom, 2004). It is necessary to say that not only Taiwan but also the PRC, in the beginning, also carried out, alongside official diplomatic activities, unofficial external ones. In this respect, e.g., the PRC had, as early as 1973, established in the USA its informal representation, the Liaison Office (Kočnerová and Marenčáková 2014, 5), which provided unofficial contacts with the Washington government.
In 1949, when Taiwan entered the international political arena, most of its foreign activities had an official, diplomatic character. In the following period, however, the number of states that had established diplomatic relations with the PRC and thus terminated diplomatic contacts with the Taipei government gradually grew, as a result of which gradually more and more Taiwan’s foreign activities acquired a nondiplomatic character. A substantial breakthrough in this developmental trend occurred in 1971 when the PRC assumed Taiwan’s seat in the UN. A number of states that had until then maintained diplomatic relations with Taipei reacted to this event by establishing diplomatic relations with Beijing. As an illustration, whereas in 1971, Taiwan had diplomatic relations with 68 countries and the PRC with only 53 countries, in 1979, this ratio was already markedly opposite, with only 21 states maintaining diplomatic relations with Taiwan and as many as 117 states with the PRC (Rawnsley 2000, 16).
As we have already stated, Taiwan’s foreign activities may be divided by their nature into two basic groups: the official diplomatic activities, which Taiwan carries out in relation to those foreign states with which it has established diplomatic relations; and the unofficial paradiplomatic activities, which Taiwan carries out in relation to the states with which it does not have diplomatic relations. Besides these two categories of Taiwan’s foreign activities, we can also distinguish a special category of unofficial external activities that Taiwan performs within the so-called Cross-Strait Relations with continental China, i.e., with authorities from the PRC.
To carry out diplomatic activities, Taiwan uses As of December 31, 2016. Taiwan’s embassies are located especially in the states of North and South America (Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, and El Salvador), the Caribbean (Dominican Republic, Haiti, Saint Lucia, Saint Christopher and Nevis, as well as Saint Vincent and the Grenadines), and the Oceania (Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu); a small number of them are also located in the states of Africa (Burkina Faso and Swaziland). The only embassy of Taiwan in Europe is at the Holy See in Rome. The only consulate general of Taiwan is located in the city Ciudad del Este in Paraguay.
Besides diplomatic missions and the consular office, one permanent mission that participates in the performance of Taiwan’s diplomatic activities is established at the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Geneva with the official name of the “Permanent Mission of the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu to the WTO”. Despite the specific name – based on the designation under which Taiwan officially acts Taiwan was accepted as a member of the WTO under the name of Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu (shortly, Chinese Taipei) (World Trade Organization, 2017), and it also operates in this international organization under this name.
To carry out quasidiplomatic or paradiplomatic activities, Taiwan has a network of 92 unofficial (nondiplomatic and nonconsular) foreign representations available, As of December 31, 2016. In support of this statement, we may add that, e.g., according to the website of Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New Zealand’s Wellington, which is one of Taiwan’s representative offices, this (office) has “the same function as an embassy” (Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New Zealand 2017). The comparison of offices to consular offices can also be found on the official websites of some of these representations. For example, on the website of the office in München (Taipeh Vertretung in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland -Buero Munchen) and in Auckland (Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Auckland), it is stated that this (office) functions as a “de facto consulate general” (Taipeh Vertretung in der Bundesrepublik, 2015) and that “it fulfils the same function as a consulate general” (Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Auckland, 2016). Namely, e.g., Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Chicago (USA) acted until 1994 under the name of Coordination Council for North American Affairs in Chicago, which originated from the transformation of a Consulate General of the Republic of China in Chicago, which occurred after the establishment of diplomatic relations between the USA and the PRC in 1979 (Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Chicago, 2016).
The official designation of the informal foreign representations of Taiwan, of both the representative offices and offices, varies in practice. It differs depending on the particular host state as well as from case to case. Currently, the unofficial representations of Taiwan act under as many as 16 various official names throughout the world; most frequently, they are known as “Taipei Economic and Cultural Office” Almost half of all the representations in the world, including, e.g., representation in the Czech Republic. More than 10 representations mostly in Europe, including, e.g., representation in the Slovak Republic. The official designations of Taiwan’s representations in the USA are laid down in the Agreement on Privileges, Exemptions and Immunities between the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States of February 4, 2013.
Names used by unofficial representations of Taiwan in the world (in alphabetical order)Commercial Office of Taipei Commercial Office of the Republic of China Economic and Cultural Delegation of Taipei Representative Office Taipei Commercial Representative Office Taipei Economic and Cultural Center Taipei Economic and Cultural Mission Taipei Economic and Cultural Office Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office Taipei Economic and Trade Office Taipei Liaison Office Taipei Mission Taipei Representation Taipei Representative Office Taipei Trade and Economic Representative Office Trade Mission of the Republic of China
All the unofficial foreign representations of Taiwan, regardless of their category, basically have a similar organizational structure, which – to a great extent – resembles the organizational structure of diplomatic missions or consular offices. At most of the representations of Taiwan, we can find, e.g., a section of economic and commercial cooperation, a section for cultural cooperation, and a consular section with the visa department, or a department that provides assistance to citizens, which likewise mostly form a common part of the organizational structure of diplomatic missions or consular offices. On the other hand, a political section, which is a fundamental part of the organizational structure of most diplomatic missions, is – in many cases – missing in the organizational structure of representative offices (but also other unofficial representations) of Taiwan. It may be assumed that the frequent absence of political departments at the unofficial representations of Taiwan is due to the fact that these representations – unlike the “standard” diplomatic missions – work in countries with which Taiwan does not have established diplomatic relations and, as a result, it only carries out political contacts (with these states) to a limited extent. The absence of political sections within some representative offices, however, may also be due to subjective worries relating to the “political incorrectness” of establishing such departments. The existence of a political section, i.e., a department that deals with political relations, in the organizational structure of Taiwan’s representation might, under certain circumstances, be viewed as a visible demonstration of the fact that this representation participates not only in the performance of tasks in the area of economic or cultural relations but also in a political dialogue with the host state authorities. From that view, it might be possible to infer that the host state recognizes the representation of Taiwan as a partner for political dialogue, which can, in turn, be interpreted as a display of the host state’s recognition of the Taiwanese authorities’ political legitimacy. The existence of a political section at an unofficial representation of Taiwan could then be perceived as challenging the position of the PRC government as the sole legitimate representative of the whole of China and thus complicate the relations of the host country with the PRC.
From the viewpoint of legal standing, unofficial foreign representations of Taiwan do not have the status of diplomatic missions or consular offices, which means that privileges, immunities, or other advantages arising from the provisions of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations or the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations do not apply to them. In practice, however, the unofficial representations of Taiwan are – in some cases – granted a certain scope of privileges and immunities, as a rule, based on a national legal regulation of the host state and/or a special bilateral treaty. For example, Australia grants to the Taiwanese representations, on the basis of its national legal regulations, in particular, Overseas Missions (Privileges and Immunities) Act 1995 and Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (Privileges and Immunities) Regulations 1998, a rather broad scale of privileges and immunities. These in relation to the representations (offices) include, e.g., inviolability of premises, property, documents, and archives, exemption from taxes, freedom of communication for official purposes, the right to use code for official communications, and the right to send and receive official documents by couriers having a standing equal to diplomatic couriers. In relation to the staff of the representations, they have, e.g., immunity from the criminal, civil, and administrative jurisdiction of the local authorities, immunity from arrest, search, and detention, and exemption from obligations to give evidence in judicial or administrative proceedings (Overseas Missions (Privileges and Immunities) Act 1995). The USA, too, grants a rather wide scale of privileges and immunities to the representations of Taiwan on the basis of the Agreement on Privileges, Exemptions and Immunities between the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the USA. In accord with the provisions of this document, the representations of Taiwan in the USA enjoy privileges and immunities, which include, for instance, the inviolability of premises from forced entry and search, inviolability of archives and documentation, and exemption from local and federal taxes (with a few exceptions). The staff members of the representation of Taiwan in Washington are, in addition to these, also granted privileges and immunities in the form of exemption from criminal jurisdiction, exemption from the obligation to give evidence in criminal, civil, administrative, or other proceedings before the local authorities, as well as immunity from arrest and detention. The staff members of other representations of Taiwan in the USA are granted analogous privileges and immunities like the staff of the representation in the capital, but with limited scope, e.g., the immunity from arrest and detention only relates to minor offences for which they would be liable to a sentence of imprisonment of <1 year; the exemption from the obligation to give witness only covers particular cases (Agreement on Privileges, 2017). On the contrary, e.g., Germany does not grant Taiwan’s representations or their staff any privileges, immunities, or other advantages at all (Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Bratislava, pers. comm., February 17, 2017). As far as the representations of Taiwan in Slovakia and in the Czech Republic are concerned, they enjoy the same privileges and immunities as the consular offices led by career consular officers in accordance with the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, but with a few exceptions, related to protocol and formal issues, e. g., they have no right to use the national flag and coat-of-arms outdoor (Taipei Representative Office in Bratislava, Representative, pers. comm., February 21, 2017).
As outlined above, from the formal and legal viewpoint, the staff of the unofficial representations of Taiwan does not enjoy diplomatic or consular status. The staff members of Taiwan’s unofficial representations likewise do not use diplomatic or consular ranks, but instead, to express the hierarchical level of their particular functional positions, they use “civil” designations, typical rather of the business sphere, such as “senior assistant” or “deputy head”. Similarly, in the naming of the individual positions within Taiwan’s representations, the “traditional” diplomatic denominations are not used, such as the “economic attaché” or “cultural attaché”, but instead we encounter “nondiplomatic” titles such as “head of economic department” or “head of cultural department”. Otherwise, from a professional viewpoint, the staff members of Taiwan’s unofficial representations are mostly career diplomats for whom work at such representations is part of their professional diplomatic career in Taiwan’s Foreign Service, and they are employees of Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The position of Taiwan’s unofficial representations is also specific from the protocolar viewpoint and it differs from the position of diplomatic missions in several aspects. For example, when coming into office, the designated head of the unofficial representation of Taiwan does not present his/her credentials (or equivalent document) to the head of the host state Nor does the designated head of Taiwan's representation present the letter of cabinet to the minister of foreign affairs, as is customary in the case of heads of diplomatic missions in a capacity of chargé d'affaires en pied (lower diplomatic class).
The personnel of Taiwan’s unofficial representations is in most cases enabled, just like diplomatic representatives, to lead direct negotiations with the ministry of foreign affairs of the host state. The staff of Taiwan's representations is usually allowed to meet and negotiate with all working-level officials In the case of the Slovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs, e.g., the working-level officials include all officials of the ministry except for the minister and the state secretaries. For example, on October 7, 2016, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic informed on its official website about the negotiations of the head of Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Prague with the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic (See: Ministerstvo zahraničních věcí, 2016).
From the organizational viewpoint, all the unofficial representations of Taiwan belong under the administration, similar to its diplomatic missions and consular offices, of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Taipei, although the formal and legal status of these representations may not always seem to testify to this. In this regard, e.g., the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the USA has the formal status of a nongovernmental institution but on the website of Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, it is explicitly stated that its “operations… are under the direction of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs” (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China 2014).
We can conclude that Taiwan’s diplomatic activities, from the point of view of their organization, institutional background, and the formal and protocolar regulations of their practical performance, do not markedly differ from the diplomatic activities carried out by most other states.
If we compare Taiwan’s diplomatic activities with its paradiplomatic activities, we can find a number of differences, as well as similarities. Differences between the diplomatic and paradiplomatic activities of Taiwan may be observed in the area of their legal regulation, in particular, in the fact that the unofficial “paradiplomatic” representations of Taiwan are, as a rule, granted privileges and immunities only to a limited extent, due to their nondiplomatic status, and that too only in some host states. Other differences between Taiwan’s diplomatic and paradiplomatic activities can be seen in the area of formal rules and protocolar policies applied in their practical performance. A special terminology is used for the designation of the unofficial “paradiplomatic” representations of Taiwan and their representatives, when, e.g., the heads of such representations are not officially addressed as “Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary” or “Consuls General” but as “representatives” or “director-generals” and the paradiplomatic representations themselves do not function under the official name of “embassy” or “consulate” but under various “alternative” names such as “Taipei Economic and Cultural Office” and so on. In the case of the heads of Taiwan’s paradiplomatic representations, the host state is not notified of their appointment by means of credentials, as is the custom in the case of the heads of diplomatic missions. Likewise, the staff of the paradiplomatic representations does not use diplomatic ranks, nor are they considered to be a part of the diplomatic corps in the host state.
On the other hand, among the features common to both the diplomatic and paradiplomatic activities of Taiwan, we can list the fact that they are managed from a single joint headquarters, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and they are usually carried out by career diplomats, i.e., by professional members of Taiwan's Foreign Service. As another common feature of the diplomatic and paradiplomatic activities of Taiwan, we can also consider the fundamentally identical form of the inner organizational structure of the entities that participate in their work. The composition of the departments that we can observe within the organizational structure of Taiwan’s paradiplomatic representations is very similar to that in diplomatic missions, also containing, e.g., a consular department.
On the basis of these considerations, we can conclude that the differences between the diplomatic and paradiplomatic dimensions of Taiwan’s foreign activities are rooted mainly in their formal and protocolar aspect, whereas from the viewpoint of their organization and practical performance, these differences are minimal. We can also conclude that Taiwan’s paradiplomatic activities are to a certain extent specific due to the fact that a number of their characteristic features, e.g., the existence of the consular dimension, resemble “traditional” diplomacy and do not possess a completely typical paradiplomatic character.