Trump is rented to Marshal of field, again

A collage showing Marshal Asim Munnir (left) and President Donald Trump. – ISPR / Reuters / File

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday praised Marshal Asim Munnir, which he recently met in the White House, and reiterated his position according to which he stopped the conflict last month between Pakistan and Nuclear India.

Addressing a press conference after attending the annual NATO summit in the Hauge, the American president described the “most important” Pakistani-Indian conflict of all the recents, saying that the two countries had nuclear weapons and he ended this by a series of calls on trade.

“I said looked at if you are going to fight each other … It became very bad … I said that if you were going to fight with each other, we are not going to make commercial transactions,” said Trump.

Presence of Marshal Munnir, Trump said: “I met the general of Pakistan last week in my office – a very impressive personality, a great man.”

He also described Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a close friend, declaring: “Modi is a great friend to me. A great gentleman ”.

“We have led them to reason and I said that we do not do any commercial agreement if you are going to fight … and you know what they said no, I want to do the commercial agreement and we arrested a nuclear war,” he added.

President Trump said last month that the neighbors of Southern Nuclear Asia had accepted a cease-fire after mediated talks by the United States and that hostilities have ended after urging countries to focus on trade instead of war.

Islamabad had previously declared that the ceasefire occurred after his soldiers had made an appeal that the Indian army had initiated on May 7.

Although Pakistan has rented time again and has credited President Trump for his role in the ceasefire, which he himself highlighted several times, India has denied any involvement of the United States.

However, the American president re -reading his position and even proposed to mediate the long -standing dispute of the cashmere between the two countries – a position also highlighted by the American State Department.

Meanwhile, the Government of Pakistan also recommended Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize 2026, citing his “decisive diplomatic intervention” and “Pivot leadership” during the recent crisis between Pakistan and India.

On June 18, Indian Prime Minister Modi told Trump that the ceasefire had been made by talks between Indian and Pakistani soldiers and not American mediation, according to India’s most upscale diplomat, Minister of Foreign Affairs Vikram Misri.

The heaviest fights for decades between Pakistan and India have been triggered by an attack on April 22 in Jammu and Kashmir (Iiojk), occupied the Jammu-Cachemire (Iiojk) which killed 26 people, most tourists. New Delhi blamed Pakistan for the attack, an accusation refused by Islamabad.

In response to the cross-border strikes of India, Pakistan had launched the Bunyan-UM-Marsoos operation after having shot down six Indian air force planes, including three gusts in response to the Indian aggression.

The two countries, after four days of armed conflict, agreed with a ceasefire on May 10.

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