"The talks with Pakistan are schdeuled in four days. Till today, it is not clear whether they will be held or not...It is not the way foreign policy is conducted," party spokesman Abhishek Singhvi told reporters.
He said no less a person than the National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval has "further compounded and confounded the confusion" that seems to have become this government's "hall mark" as far as dealing with extremely serious and sensitive issues of national security are concerned.
He said since just 4 days are left for the scheduled talks, rather than "attempting riddles and compounding the crisis", it will be good if the NSA and the Prime Minister told the nation about actions and responses in the wake of the Pathankot terror attack.
The Congress spokesman said government should tell the nation as to what are the 'actionable proofs and evidences' it has given to Pakistan and whether the Government of Pakistan acted on these evidences and to what extent.
"Are these actions sufficient enough to surmount the earlier stand of the Prime Minister as also the External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj that 'talks and terror can't go ahead simultaneously'?" he asked.
The nation is yet not clear about the happenings in Pathankot and the direction thereafter, 10 days after the "embarrassing mumbling" of Senior Ministers and "high optics" aerial survey by the Prime Minister, he said.
Singhvi said certain questions about the Pathankot attack
remained unanswered in the absence of any "substantive response" on part of the government.
"Is it true that the command and control of this multi-agency operation was resolved when the inspector general (IG), NSG, and Army had a tussle over the issue?" he wanted to know.
Besides, he sought to know whether there was no effort to place additional troops to protect the perimeter wall of the air base which should have been secured and patrolled by at least one infantry battalion.
Noting that for counter-terrorist operations, a lead agency and a commander for single-point command and control must be earmarked, he asked whether there was any.
Targeting Punjab's ruling Akali dal and the Badal family, he alleged the state has become a "cesspit of corruption and drug smuggling" ruled by a "venal" family and party that have brought "India's most dynamic province to its knees".
"India cannot afford such mismanagement of a strategic border state. What were the steps taken by the Centre in the past 19 months to break the nexus of drug trafficking and terrorism in the border state, after the Gurdaspur and the Udhampur attacks?" he said.
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