At some point, in 2016, a series of talks were held in which they were determined to find a meeting, although only the illusion of A.S. Dulat and Asad Durrani. One was the former head of RAW, an external intelligence agency in India, the other ISI, his Pakistani colleague.

As they could not meet in their countries of origin, the talks led by the journalist Aditya Sinha took place in cities such as Istanbul, Bangkok and Kathmandu. At the table, the issues that had long frightened South Asia were the flash points that usually live. In every way, I was deeply immersed in the politics of the subcontinent, as seen through the eyes of the two spies. Among the topics: Kashmir and a lost opportunity for peace; Hafiz Saeed on 26/11; Kulbhushan Jadhav; surgical attacks; business of Osama bin Laden; how the United States and Russia are in the relations between India and Pakistan; and how terrorism undermines the efforts of both countries in the talks. When he first thought about the project, General Durrani laughed and said that no one would believe it, even if it was written as fiction. During a period of overwhelmed relationships, this incredible dialogue between the two former leaders of soldiers from opposing sides, the project that is the first, could offer some answers.