Trump has repeatedly said that he avoided a nuclear war, saved millions of lives – and was upset that he did not get credit for him.
Pakistan says he will recommend US President Donald Trump for Nobel Peace Item, an appreciation he has said he wants.
In May, a surprise announcement from Trump of a ceasefire brought an unexpected end to a four-day conflict between the armed nuclear enemies India and Pakistan.
Trump has then said that he avoided a nuclear war, saved millions of lives and was upset that he did not get credit for him.
Pakistan agrees that US diplomatic intervention ended the fighting but India says It was a bilateral deal between the two military.
“President Trump demonstrated a great strategic distance and stellar state state through a strong diplomatic engagement with Islamabad and New Delhi, who escalated a rapidly deteriorating situation,” Islamabad said in a statement posted on X.
“This intervention lies as a testimony of his role as a true peacemaker and his commitment to resolving conflicts through dialogue.”
Governments can name people for Nobel Peace Item. There was no immediate response from Washington, DC or New Delhi.
Some analysts in Pakistan said measures could persuade Trump to think again about Israel’s potentially union in Iran’s blow nuclear. Pakistan has condemned Israel’s action as a violation of international law and a threat to regional stability.
In a social media post on Friday, Trump gave a long list of conflicts he said he had resolved, including India and Pakistan and so -called Abraham arrangement In his first mandate between Israel and some Muslim -majority countries. He added: “I will not receive a Nobel Prize for peace no matter what I do.”
Panding for Trump’s ‘ego’?
Trump has repeatedly said that he is ready to mediate between India and Pakistan on the discussed region of Kashmir, their main source of hostility. Islamabad, who has long sought international attention to Kashmir, is pleased.
But his stance has increased US policy in South Asia, which had favored India as a counterweight to China, and questioned the close relations between Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Pakistan’s mass to nominate Trump came the same week its army chief, Marshal Asim Munir, met with the US president For lunch. It was the first time that a Pakistani military leader was invited to the White House when a civil government was in place in Islamabad.
Trump’s scheduled meeting at the G7 Summit in Canada last week did not take place after the US president left early, but the two later spoke by phone, in which Modi said “India does not accept and will never accept mediation” in her dispute with Pakistan, according to the Indian government.
Mushahid Hussain, a former chairman of the Senate Defense Committee in Pakistan’s parliament, suggested that Trump’s appointment for the peace price was justified.
“Trump is good for Pakistan,” he said. “If this uninterrupted for Trump’s ego, so it will be. All European leaders have absorbed him a great time.”
But the mass was not universally applauded in Pakistan, where Trump’s support for the Israeli war in Gaza has inflamed passions.
“Israeli’s Dad of Israel in Gaza and his stimulant on Iran’s attacks is not a candidate for any price,” said Talat Hussain, a prominent host of Pakistani television political conversations in a post on X.
“And what if he starts kissing modi on both pages again after a few months?”
