By
IOL South Asia Correspondent
New
Delhi, November 25 (IslamOnline) - As part of its diplomatic offensive
against what it calls Pakistan's "cross-border terrorism",
India on Sunday, November 24, brought out a "White Paper" on
the subject in the form of a book and sent it to governments of various
countries and Indian missions abroad.
The
book entitled "Pakistan's Involvement in Terrorism Against
India", attempts to show that far from removing terrorist
infrastructure existing in Pakistan, President Musharraf regime has
merely carried out "cosmetic exercises" to address the
concerns of the western nations, especially the United States.
The
long-awaited book did not catch much media attention due to the sudden
attack on the Jammu temple last night. India has been for many years
promising to publish such a book.
The
book compiles a list of terrorist training camps, their locations,
offices and addresses of leaders of the terrorist outfits, numerous
cases of attacks carried out by them in India, the links between these
outfits and Pakistan government agencies including ISI and claims and
statements made by terrorists.
The
188-page book has a section on the background of Lashkar-e-Toiba chief
Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who was released in Lahore on November 18 after
being under house arrest. He now heads the political wing of LeT called
Jamaat-al-Dawaa. Indian deputy prime minister today said that release of
Saeed was directly responsible for the attack on Jammu temple.
In
recent weeks, while India fights off mounting western pressure to start
dialogue with Islamabad, New Delhi has stepped up rhetoric against
Pakistan. So much so that Indian rulers have made it clear that from now
on they will comment on Pakistan's internal affairs.
Pakistan
too may be compiling such a book soon. Pakistan maintains that RAW,
Indian equivalent of CIA, is responsible for many violent incidents in
Pakistan. While India prefers "Pakistani agents" dead,
Pakistan captures Indian agents alive and marches them in front of the
media and foreign diplomats.
Indian
foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha today bitterly attacked the West for
what he called "adopting double-standards" in dealing with
India's concerns on Pakistan-sponsored cross-border terrorism. Sinha
asked for economic sanctions and "all kinds of pressure" on
Islamabad to put a complete and permanent stop to infiltration.
"If
the international community wants, Pakistan will give up its acts of
terrorism against India in no time. There is obviously some disconnect
between what they tell us and what they tell Pakistan," Sinha said
in an interview to Tim Sebastian on BBC World's Hard Talk programme
aired today.
Sinha
said he stood by his remarks in London that the international community
has lost its moral right to advise India on the issue of terrorism
vis-a-vis Pakistan since it was making a "distinction between the
good terrorist who operates in India, and especially in Jammu and
Kashmir and the bad terrorist who operates elsewhere".
Asked
why India was not talking to Pakistan, Sinha shot back: "is the
West talking to Osama bin Laden? "Terrorism that Pakistan is
unleashing against India is as bad as the terrorism which the Taliban
and al-Qaeda was unleashing in Afghanistan and elsewhere. And, if they
are not to be talked to, they have to be dealt with in another
manner," he said.
"We
will talk to Pakistan. We have never said that we will not talk to
Pakistan but there must be a conducive atmosphere," Sinha said