Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today said he is hopeful of a change in Pakistan's attitude on tackling terrorism emanating from its soil against India but one has to wait and watch.
"The Home Minister (P Chidambaram) was in Pakistan last week. You must have read what he has stated. I think there is some hope. As I have said in dealing with Pakistan our attitude has to be - trust - trust but verify. So only time will tell which way the animal will turn," Singh told reporters accompanying him on his way back home after attending the G-20 Summit in Toronto.
Prime Minister was replying to a question that while he was working hard on making peace with Pakistan, how India proposes to go ahead in case of another 26/11 type attack.
Singh had yesterday pressed US President Barack Obama to convince Pakistan to take strong action against terrorists involved in anti-India activities in that country following disclosures made by LeT operative David Headley.
Singh, who met Obama on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit, briefed him about the peace initiatives with Pakistan but made it clear that Islamabad should abide by its commitment of not to allow terrorism emanating from its soil directed against India.
The activities of Headley came up for discussion in the light of information coming out of Pakistani-American LeT operative after his interrogation by Indian investigators.
Chidambaram had last week met his Pakistani counterpart Rehman Malik and pressed for prosecution of more people involved in the 26/11 attacks.
India and Pakistan had in April decided to resume talks at the Foreign Secretaries and Foreign Ministers level after a gap of 18 months. Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao was in Islamabad last week and External Affairs Minister S M Krishna will travel to Pakistan on July 15 to meet his counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi.
India had put the Composite Dialogue process on hold after the Mumbai attacks, blamed on the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba.