
Trump praises ‘very impressive' Pakistan army chief, reiterates trade stopped Indo-Pak war
ISLAMABAD: US President Donald Trump praised Pakistan's army chief on Wednesday, describing him as 'very impressive' while reiterating his earlier claim of preventing a nuclear war between Islamabad and New Delhi with trade deals last month.
Trump hosted Field Marshal General Asim Munir for lunch last Wednesday in an unprecedented White House meeting. The American president had told reporters he was 'honored' to meet the Pakistani general and that the two discussed the Iran-Israel conflict.
Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan engaged in a days-long military conflict before Trump announced a ceasefire between the two on May 10. Trump has repeatedly said he offered to help both nations with trade if they agreed to de-escalate.
At the NATO summit in The Hague, Trump was asked by a reporter why he had failed to stop the ongoing military conflict between Russia and Ukraine. The American president responded by saying he had stopped wars between Iran and Israel as well as India and Pakistan, saying the conflict 'was getting very bad' between the nuclear-armed rivals.
'And in fact I had the general, who was very impressive, the general from Pakistan was in my office last week,' Trump said.
He described Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a 'great man, a great gentleman,' saying Washington helped both countries reason with each other at the height of the conflict.
'I said we're not going to do a trade deal if you're going to fight and if you're going to fight each other we're not doing a trade deal and you know what, they said, 'No, I want to do the trade deal.' And we stopped a nuclear war.'
Pakistan's government last week announced it would formally nominate Trump for what it called his 'decisive diplomatic intervention' during the military standoff with India in May.
The American president has also previously offered to mediate the decades-old Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan, who both claim the disputed Himalayan region in full but administer only parts of it.
While the ceasefire continues to persist, tensions simmer as New Delhi refuses to budge from its stance of suspending a decades-old water-sharing treaty with Pakistan.
Pakistan has said any attempts to stop or divert its flow of water by India will be regarded as an 'act of war' and will be responded to with full force.
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