[Yeah!
"Constructive engagement" means exchanging fire and destructing bunkers.
Idiots just don't get it.

《The spokesperson for Pakistan’s foreign ministry now said the minister had
not said “the Indian Prime Minister had made an offer of a dialogue”, but
had said that the Indian Prime Minister in his letter had mentioned
something similar to what the foreign minister elucidated earlier - that
the way forward was only through “constructive engagement”.》

Also look up: 'PM Modi's Letter To Imran Khan: India Ready For Constructive
Engagement With Pakistan' at <
https://www.outlookindia.com/website/story/pm-modis-letter-to-imran-khan-india-ready-for-constructive-engagement-with-pakis/315303
>.]

https://www.news18.com/amp/news/india/new-delhi-pakistan-has-walked-back-on-newly-elected-foreign-affairs-minister-shah-mehmood-qureshis-claim-that-pm-narendra-modi-had-written-to-his-pakistani-counterpart-imran-khan-expressing-1850413.html

Pakistan Makes U-turn on Its Foreign Minister’s Claim That PM Modi Willing
to Resume Dialogue
Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi interpreted engagement on
terror as comprehensive dialogue, something the India side denied PM Modi's
letter had offered.

Updated on: August 20, 2018, 4:55 PM IST
News18.com

Pakistan Makes U-turn on Its Foreign Minister’s Claim That PM Modi Willing
to Resume Dialogue

New Delhi: Pakistan has walked back on newly elected foreign affairs
minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi’s claim that PM Narendra Modi had written to
his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan expressing interest in resuming the
peace process.

The volte-face came after sources in the Indian government said PM Modi's
letter to the newly sworn-in Pakistan prime Minister was a congratulatory
note and there was no offer of dialogue.


The letter said, according to sources, that India was committed to peaceful
neighbourly relations and a terror-free region. It went on to say that
India is willing to constructively engage with Pakistan on that count.

The spokesperson for Pakistan’s foreign ministry now said the minister had
not said “the Indian Prime Minister had made an offer of a dialogue”, but
had said that the Indian Prime Minister in his letter had mentioned
something similar to what the foreign minister elucidated earlier - that
the way forward was only through “constructive engagement”.


The foreign minister was also briefed about the same positivity and
constructive environment prevailing during the meeting of the former law
minister with India’s external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj during his
visit to India on August 18 to attend the funeral of former PM Atal Bihari
Vajpayee, he said.

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj had in her annual press conference
this year asserted that 'terror and talks' cannot go together but 'talks on
terror' can take place referring to the engagement between the NSAs of the
two countries.

But Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi interpreted engagement
on terror as comprehensive dialogue, something the India side denied PM
Modi's letter had offered.

Addressing a press conference after taking charge of his country's foreign
affairs department, Qureshi had said, "India and Pakistan have to move
forward keeping realities before them."

In his press conference, which he held just an hour after swearing in as
the Foreign Affairs Minister, Qureshi had claimed, “The Indian Prime
Minister issued a letter yesterday in which he has congratulated Imran Khan
and has sent a message of dialogue [between the two countries].”

He also stressed the need for dialogue between the two countries, saying
that Pakistan has no option but to talk to India. "We cannot afford
adventurism," Qureshi said during his press conference.

Underlining a different approach in dealing with India, he said that
Pakistan was looking “to change how we behave”.

Directly addressing the Indian Foreign Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj,
Qureshi said, "We are neighbours and both of us are aware of our mutual
issues. We have no option but to talk to each other, to engage.” He also
added, perhaps referring to ‘surgical strikes’, “We cannot afford any
adventurism.”

Everyone knows that the problems are complex as are their solutions,
Qureshi said, and knowing this we cannot turn our faces away.

“We have to acknowledge that there are some outstanding issues between us.
Whether we want it or not Kashmir is a reality, a problem, which the now
deceased former Prime Minister of India, AB Vajpayee, had also acknowledged
in his trip to Pakistan,” Qureshi said.

He called for a “continued, uninterrupted” dialogue between the two
countries.

Qureshi is one of the most seasoned Pakistani political leaders with
previous experience in dealing Pakistan's foreign affairs. He served as
Pakistani foreign minister between 2008-13 under then president Asif
Zardari and former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

He also once served as provincial finance minister in the cabinet of Nawaz
Sharif when he was the chief minister of the Punjab during the military
rule of Gen Zia-ul Haq.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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