Middlesex captain Shaun Udal and chief executive Vinny Codrington
Middlesex will discover the future of the postponed Champions League cricket tournament in India on 12 December.
The decision will be made by officials from India, Australia and South Africa following a conference call.
The eight-team competition would have run from 3 to 10 December, but the Mumbai terror attacks forced a rethink.
Champions League spokesman Javed Akhtar told BBC Sport: "There will be increased security at all levels. I think the teams will have no issues."
The England squad, having returned home following the events of 26 November, are scheduled to fly back to India on Monday to start a two-Test series on 11 December.
The Champions League summit will be chaired by the Board of Control for Cricket in India, and feature representatives from Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa.
Pakistan and England also have teams in the inaugural edition of the Twenty20 tournament.
However, both Middlesex and Pakistan's Sialkot Stallions will have to wait until after the meeting as they are not founding board members of the Champions League.
Middlesex - who qualified for the competition by winning English cricket's domestic Twenty20 Cup in July - are optimistic they will be able to travel to India.
The club's chief executive Vinny Codrington told BBC London: "We will liaise closely with the ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) in relation to the security side of things. The lads, all things being equal, will be very keen to go back.
"Clearly we have to go through the same due diligence that the England management have done with the England players.
"But in their heart of hearts the players will want to go back and prove that they can compete against the best."
Akhtar said he was hopeful the positive intent shown by Kevin Pietersen's squad would boost confidence among other teams scheduled to play cricket in the country.
"They should not worry, and because England are prepared to come back here so soon that will inspire them to do the same," he said.
"England did a fantastic thing by deciding to come. It's good for the game, it's good for India and good for cricket."
Reports have suggested a re-organised tournament could begin in the third week of January, but Akhtar said it was "premature to talk about" revised dates.
"That is one of the things to be decided on 12 December, along with the issue of whether the same venues will continue to be used," he added.
Tim May, the former Australian player who runs the Federation of International Cricketers' Association, remained cautious, describing India as a "relatively volatile sort of landscape".
He told The Age: "The players totally understand how important it is for cricket to continue to be played in the subcontinent, and that is not from a selfish point of view in terms of player wages, it is also about the whole game."
Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai were the three original venues.
Middlesex's players are employed on 12-month contracts, so should be available on most revised dates.
Competing teams at the Champions League: Rajasthan Royals (Ind), Chennai Super Kings (Ind), Victoria Bushrangers (Aus), Western Warriors (Aus), Dolphins (SA), Titans (SA), Sialkot Stallions (Pkn), Middlesex Crusaders.
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