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Indian field intelligence and remote viewers warn Indian Government of Pakistan’s intensions – India takes tough stance with Pakistan
Sudhir Chadda, Special Correspondent
December 18, 2004

India all on a sudden took a U turn on the peace process with Pakistan. India intends to make it clear to Pakistan that it does not consider the present status quo in Kashmir as acceptable. India is not prepared to accept the Line of Control as a border and is prepared to see it move west.

This is a sharp change from what the two countries were trying to negotiate and settle. Sources close to the Government report that India’s intelligence agencies have sensed something foul on the Pakistani side. Details are being held back but some rumors are floating those remote viewers and field agents are reporting some strange and sinister plans of Pakistan in Bangladesh as well as Kashmir areas. Some say Pakistan plans to make normal relations with India and then push massive numbers of terrorists in the country. A recent peace proposal would have allowed thousands of Pakistanis enter India through Pakistan side of Kashmir without any passports. After pushing these terrorists into India, Pakistan’s ISI would have created havoc in the country.

The intelligence agencies and Indian Army intelligence were warning the Government about Musharraf’s real intensions. Indian field agents were also seeing the terrorist activities in Bangladesh in the east. The Indian cricket team was threatened in Bangladesh last week. They are visiting the neighboring country under tight security arrangements.

Remote viewing experts of Indian Intelligence have sensed something real bad. The field agents have also confirmed to a great extent. 

New Delhi now plans to point out that the 1994 parliamentary resolution that declared Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir and the Northern Territories an integral part of India still stands.

India will even argue that Pervez Musharraf's seven-region proposal for Kashmir as evidence that the status of the Northern Territories is back on the negotiating table. This will be one of many signs indicating that New Delhi believes the Indo-Pakistan peace process has failed to reach its own momentum and requires some purposeful pushing. 

New Delhi is not prepared to "dilute" its demand for passports for passengers on the proposed Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus. Without passports it will be impossible for India to check who is crossing into the country. 

India will also not accept the demilitarisation of Siachen on the basis of good faith. One prerequisite for such an agreement would be that the positions held by both countries are demarcated and marked on the ground. India will also underline its view that the true representatives of the Kashmiri people are those who have been elected - further evidence of New Delhi's increasing displeasure with the Hurriyat, the separatist group in Kashmir. This hardening stance follows from Indian perceptions that Pakistan is showing no leeway in the peace process and as a matter of fact may be planning a lethal assault on India through covert war on India after massive infiltration through Kashmir in the West and Bangladesh in the East.

 
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