you will need a real router... because if you add a route it will need to be "via" something.. and none of you other devices will route.
a cisco for example would need to have an interface with the 192.168.1.x network and another with 192.168.3.x. the rotuer would then "route" between those interfaces.
the route command on your server would allow that server to talk to that network.. but nobody else would route through your server... that is what a router is for.
You can acheive this using RRAS (routing and remote access). You basically want add a second nework card and configure the RRAS server as a LAN router. From there you can add static routes to get your packets going back and forth.
What are you actually trying to acheive though? What does the belkin router connect to? If there are no other hosts in the 192.168.3.1 255.255.255.128 subnet then you can just change the IP address of the inside interface of the Belkin router to a valid address in you 192.168.0.1/24 subnet.
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