‘Settled a war a month’: Trump again takes credit for India-Pakistan ceasefire; claims ‘ending 5 wars’ globally | India News

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'Settled a war a month': Trump again takes credit for India-Pakistan ceasefire; claims 'ending 5 wars' globally
US President Donald Trump (Image credit: AP)

NEW DELHI: US President Donald Trump as soon as again on Sunday repeated his claims of brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan, together with ending a number of different world conflicts.In put up on Truth Social, Trump responded to radio host and creator Charlamagne Tha God saying the host knew “nothing” about his achievements, together with “just ending 5 Wars, including a 31 year bloodbath between Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, where Seven Million people have died, and there was no end in sight.”Trump added, (*5*)Speaking to Newsmax a day earlier, Trump claimed to have “settled a lot of wars,” together with India and Pakistan.“One of the wars—India, Pakistan, nuclear,” he mentioned. He additionally cited conflicts in Thailand and Cambodia, and Congo and Rwanda, saying many have been resolved by commerce strain, reported PTI.“I said ‘listen, you guys are going to fight. You can fight all you want. I mean, just fight your hearts out. But we’re not doing a trade deal’. All of a sudden they end up not doing a war.”Trump added, “I settled a lot of wars. I think I settled averaging about a war a month. But, you know, we’re saving millions of lives.”Last week, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt supported Trump’s declare, saying he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. “Trump has now ended conflicts between Thailand and Cambodia, Israel and Iran, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India and Pakistan, Serbia and Kosovo, and Egypt and Ethiopia,” she mentioned at a briefing. She claimed Trump has “brokered, on average, about one peace deal or ceasefire per month” in his six months in workplace.Since May 10, Trump has claimed a number of occasions that India and Pakistan had agreed to a “full and immediate” ceasefire after US-mediated talks.However, officers have firmly denied any US involvement within the latest ceasefire. Prime Minister Narendra Modi advised Parliament that no international chief urged India to cease Operation Sindoor, launched in response to the April 22 terror assault in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pahalgam that killed 26 folks.External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar mentioned there was “no third-party intervention” and dismissed any hyperlink between the ceasefire and commerce. “Prime Minister Modi and Trump did not have any phone calls between April 22, when the Pahalgam terror attack took place, and June 16,” Jaishankar mentioned within the Rajya Sabha as quoted by PTI.



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