Don't try to hide behind legalese.
It is called due process.
Despite popular perception in India, the fact is that India has not provided a complete case to Pakistan. The only thing India has "proved" in the international community is that certain individuals need to be taken in for questioning. Well, Pakistan did that and there was not enough evidence for a conviction.
We know that India wants its pound of flesh, but we are not going to punish innocent people just to please India.
Pakistan has shown no such sensitivity to legal niceties when it comes to liquidating the TTP volunteers in Swat.
TTP militants were actively firing at our army and civilians. You have Kasab, who was similarly caught red handed.
Does India have very good intel to attack a camp that was responsible for the attack?
I don't know if there are any camps. Why do you need a camp to learn to fire a few simple weapons?
And what kind of 'surgical strike' would India attempt? Is it going to send MKIs to drop bombs on a Pakistani city? India knows the Pakistani response would be swift and deadly.
The only thing India could do would be covert operations, but those take time and would not satisfy the public need for an immediate response.
The only way is for us to talk, that will start if Pakistan can do something on the lines of a confidence building act.
That is correct.
As people have pointed out, no country can provide a 100% guarantee against terrorism and, if history is any guide, there may well be another incident, unfortunately.
What India and Pakistan need is a mutual level of confidence that Pakistan is doing enough to deter such attacks. However, that is hampered by both sides because, as some Indians have admitted, India may not have shared all the supposed "evidence", for fear of compromising its informants within Pakistan.