New Delhi
3 May 2011
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's disengagement-is-not-an-option line came
under increased strain Tuesday following Pakistan's unhelpful attitude on the issue of
bringing the 26/11 perpetrators to justice.
Salman Bashir, Pakistan's foreign secretary, dismissed New Delhi's demand for action
against the 26/11 terrorists, reiterated most recently by home minister P Chidambaram
on Monday, as "outdated".
"It is a familiar line (and) outdated. It is some part of the old system repeating itself[.]
This line of thinking is mired in a mindset that is neither realistic nor productive. Such
statements are not very helpful [to the peace process]," Bashir said.
However, indications are that Prime Minister Singh was likely to stay the course in spite
of pressure on him to reappraise his Pakistan initiative and to craft an appropriate
Afghanistan strategy in the post-Osama bin Laden era.
There was a view in official circles that India must persist with the dialogue, if it does not
want to fritter away the gains made in official and unofficial (track-two) talks with
Islamabad, and if it wants the 'Mohali spirit' to survive.
The prime ministers of India and Pakistan would get at least two opportunities to re-
engage each other, on the margins of the Saarc summit in Maldives in November this
year, and on the sidelines of the July 2012 NAM summit in Iran.
A section of the official circles said that it became even imperative that New Delhi
brought diplomatic pressure to bear upon Islamabad, given its inability or reluctance to
mount covert operations inside Pakistan.
Also, it was pointed out that Prime Minister Singh need only take a cue from his British
counterpart, David Cameron, who said that the world must remain engaged with Pakistan
if only to strengthen the hands of the civilian government there.
Cameron had accused Pakistan of looking "both ways" on terrorism in July 2010, and his
words were only now finding a resonance in Washington and other world capitals
following Pakistan's alleged complicity in harbouring Osama bin Laden.
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