"We want to have normal relationship with India. There is a political consensus in Pakistan on this," Chaudhry told a Washington audience during his appearance at the Atlantic Council, a US think-tank.
Noting that India lacks such kind of political consensus, Chaudhry alleged that it is the Indian government which has stopped the Indo-Pak dialogue.
"Pakistan is open to dialogue with India. The only solution to move forward is dialogue, the dialogue is suspended because of India," Chaudhry, who is here for the US-Pak Security, Strategic Stability, and Nonproliferation dialogue, said.
India had suspended the scheduled foreign secretary level talks with Pakistan in August last year after Pakistani envoy in New Delhi met Kashmir separatists on the eve of the dialogue.
Responding to a question, the top Pakistani diplomat said that nuclear weapons are a great stabilising factor in South Asia and that the two nuclear power countries need to act responsibly.
The Indo-US civilian nuclear deal was a great destabilising factor in the region, he said, and sought inclusion of Pakistan in the international nuclear community.
A lot of investment has been made to ensure that there is no threat to the nuclear weapons and installations, he said.
Pakistan, he said, is fully committed to ensure its territory is not used by terrorists to create instability within its country and to any other country including our neighbours.
"There has been a paradigm shift in Pakistan in the last one year in this regard. There are no good or bad terrorists, they are only liabilities. As a result we have achieved remarkable success (in fight against terrorism)," the foreign secretary said.
"We have challenged that," he said.
Pakistan want to have a peaceful coexistence with India, he said, adding that Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had a very good meeting with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi at his swearing in ceremony in May last year.
Chaudhry claimed Pakistan is taking extra steps to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai terrorist attack to justice, despite the fact it has not received enough evidence against those who were responsible for it.
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