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Trump has repeatedly said that he had avoided a nuclear war, saved millions of lives – and groaned that he had no credit.
Pakistan says that it would recommend US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, a distinction he said he wanted.
In May, a surprise announcement by Trump of a ceasefire put a brutal end to a four-day conflict between the enemies of nuclear weapons India and Pakistan.
Since then, Trump has repeatedly declared that he had avoided a nuclear war, saved millions of lives and growled that he had no credit.
Pakistan agrees that American diplomatic intervention ended the fighting, but India says It was a bilateral agreement between the two soldiers.
“President Trump has shown great strategic foresight.
“This intervention testifies to his role as an authentic peaceful and his commitment to conflict resolution through dialogue.”
Governments can name people for the Nobel Peace Prize. There was no immediate response from Washington, DC or New Delhi.
Some analysts in Pakistan have declared that this decision could persuade Trump to think again to join Israel to strike Iran nuclear installations. Pakistan has condemned Israel’s action as a violation of international law and a threat to regional stability.
Friday, in an article on social networks, Trump gave a long list of conflicts he said that he had resolved, notably India and Pakistan and the so-called Abraham agreements In his first mandate between Israel and certain Muslim majority countries. He added: “I will not get a Nobel Peace Prize, no matter what I do.”
Trump repeatedly said that he was ready to mediate between India and Pakistan in the contested region of cashmere, their main source of enmity. Islamabad, who has long attracted international attention to cashmere, is delighted.
But his position upset American policy in South Asia, which had favored India as counterweight to China, and questioned the previously close relations between Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Pakistan’s decision to appoint Trump came the same week as his army chief, Marshal Asim Munir, met the American president For lunch. It was the first time that a Pakistani military chief was invited to the White House when a civil government was in place in Islamabad.
Trump’s planned meeting with Modi at the G7 summit in Canada last week did not take place after the American president’s departure, but both spoke by phone, in which Modi said that “India will not accept and will never accept mediation” in his dispute with Pakistan, according to Indian government.
Mushahid Hussain, former president of the Senate Defense Committee in Pakistan Parliament, suggested that Trump’s appointment for the peace prize was justified.
“Trump is good for Pakistan,” he said. “If that is ponded at Trump’s ego, too bad. All European leaders have sucking him a lot.”
But this decision was not universally applauded in Pakistan, where Trump’s support for the War of Israel in Gaza ignited passions.
“Israel’s sugar dad in Gaza and the cheerleader on Iran is not a candidate for a prize,” said Talat Hussain, an eminent animator of Pakistani television political show, in an article on X.
“What if he starts getting Modi again on both cheeks after a few months?”