, at Rashtrapati Bhavan on 4 December 2017 After training at the
Foreign Service Institute in New Delhi, Ajay Bisaria chose Russian as his language of specialization and was posted at the Indian Embassy in
Moscow (1988 – 1991) where he was attached to the economic and political wings of the Embassy. He worked as a Soviet internal affairs specialist in the months leading up to the dissolution of the USSR. He served as Under Secretary in the
Ministry of External Affairs on the East Europe desk (1991 – 92) when India was engaged in building new relationships with the post-Soviet countries. He then moved to the
Ministry of Commerce (1992–95), in the era of
economic liberalization. He contributed to a new trade policy paradigm, using his training in economics and finance, as part of a team that managed a complex transition of India's trade arrangements from a rupee-based to a hard currency regime. He was posted as First Secretary in the Indian Embassy in Berlin (1995–1999), where he facilitated commercial relations at a time of rising economic engagement between a unifying Germany and a liberalizing India. He also led a project management team to oversee the development and construction of the new building of the Embassy of Indian in Berlin in the historic Tiergarten area. In 1999, Bisaria was appointed
Private Secretary to the
Prime Minister of India,
Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and served in the role for the whole of Vajpayee's term, until 2004. In addition to managing the office of the Prime Minister as staff officer, he acted as an advisor to Vajpayee on various economic, defence and foreign policy initiatives. He attended more than 50 international summits with the Prime Minister as part of his delegation. Following his service at the
Prime Minister's Office, Bisaria was seconded to the
World Bank in Washington D.C. as an Advisor to the executive director for South Asia (2004–2008), where he worked on development projects and aid issues, contributing to corporate governance and India's multilateral economic diplomacy. He was involved in developing a policy approach to enhance India's rankings in reports on the Ease of Doing Business. In 2009, Bisaria returned to Delhi to serve as Joint Secretary (Eurasia) in the Ministry of External Affairs (2009–2014). In this role, he coordinated India's foreign policy and bilateral relations with the Eurasia region (including Russia, Ukraine and Central Asia). He was the principal architect behind the
United Progressive Alliance government's new policy outlook for India in Central Asia (‘Connect Central Asia’) and coordinated India's approach to six annual Indo-Russian summits, including the first annual summit between Prime Minister Modi and President Putin in India in December 2014. Additionally, he led the development of the India-Russia ‘special and privileged strategic partnership’. He also worked on India's relationship with multilateral institutions like the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, including managing India's application to join the group, and led India's participation in the Russia–India–China trilateral dialogue. In January 2015, Bisaria was appointed India's
Ambassador to Poland, based in
Warsaw, with
concurrent accreditation to Lithuania, serving until November 2017. During his time in Poland, he focused on forging economic partnerships and deepening India's cultural footprint in Central and Eastern Europe. He also served as India's representative in the Warsaw-based
Community of Democracies, participating in the Community meetings in Warsaw, Geneva and New York. == As High Commissioner to Pakistan ==