India asked to exploit FATA, Balochistan situations
* Idea to build pressure on Pakistan floated by Indian publication house after Mumbai attacks
* Report prepared as part of efforts to prevent future attacks
Staff Report
PESHAWAR: The Indian government has been advised to exploit the situation in the Tribal Areas and the insurgency-hit Balochistan in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks, according to a 72-page white paper handed over to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi.
Exploit the divisions within Pakistan and expose its weaknesses in Balochistan, FATA and Azad Kashmir, says the white paper titled War on Terror: The Agenda for Action and posted on the website of India Today but does not elaborate. The Balochistan government already believes India is fuelling militancy in the province.
The suggestion is one of several proposals to prevent future attacks against India. The white paper was prepared as part of the Indian civil societys effort to bring to the public domain an agenda for action, and not to apportion blame for the failures that led to the Mumbai attacks, according to the publication house linked to India Today that floated the idea to press the government to declare war on terror.
The white paper also asks the government: Mount a sustained diplomatic campaign to build international pressure, especially from the US, with the message that if such efforts fail, India is ready for war. Set a timeline for Pakistan to dismantle terror infrastructure.
The report refers to the Kashmir issue as a cause for attacks like the ones in Mumbai, and suggests, India needs to tackle the (Indian-held Kashmir) valley discontent by deciding how much autonomy Kashmir requires and working out a way to negotiate with Pakistan.
India blames Pakistan for the Mumbai terror attacks, but Islamabad and certain Western countries such as Britain deny the charge.
The Indian prime minister recently alleged that Pakistans intelligence agencies were involved in the attack, and India has handed over Pakistan a so-called dossier of evidence linking elements in Pakistan to the Mumbai attacks.
But Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani says the dossier contains information, not evidence.