Latest news with #IndiaPakistanCrisis


Irish Times
21-06-2025
- Politics
- Irish Times
Pakistan says it will nominate Donald Trump for Nobel Peace Prize
The Pakistani government has said it will nominate US president Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize , a move that may have as much to do with annoying rival India as it does with building stronger ties to Washington. The recommendation is being made for Trump's 'decisive intervention and pivotal leadership during the recent India-Pakistan crisis', according to a social media post on Saturday by Pakistan's government. Trump's 'robust diplomatic engagement with both Islamabad and New Delhi' served to de-escalate 'a rapidly deteriorating situation, ultimately securing a ceasefire and averting a broader conflict', according to a separate statement from Pakistan's embassy in the US. The move is likely to irritate Indian officials, who were caught off guard when Trump announced the ceasefire in a conflict that erupted in April following a terrorist attack in Kashmir. India blamed the attack on Pakistan, which rejected the accusation, and the two sides' militaries skirmished in the aftermath. READ MORE Pakistan officials celebrated Trump's announcement, while officials in Indian prime minister Narendra Modi 's government seethed. India has rejected Trump's claims that US mediation or the prospects of a trade deal helped defuse tensions with Pakistan. Modi rebutted many of those claims directly in a call with Trump this week. But in saying it would nominate Trump – who met Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir this week – Islamabad has suggested it understands how to assuage the American president. Government of Pakistan Recommends President Donald J. Trump for 2026 Nobel Peace Prize The Government of Pakistan has decided to formally recommend President Donald J. Trump for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize, in recognition of his decisive diplomatic intervention and pivotal… — Government of Pakistan (@GovtofPakistan) Trump has long grumbled about the fact that his first-term predecessor, Barack Obama , won the Nobel Prize in 2009 – a controversial decision that came before Obama surged US troops in Afghanistan. Nonetheless, Trump has repeatedly said over the years that it's an accolade he, too, deserves. During a speech last year, Trump said: 'If I were named Obama, I would have had the Nobel Prize given to me in 10 seconds'. The American leader was back at it late Friday, issuing a lengthy post saying he merited the award – which recipients typically don't lobby for – for easing tensions between Serbia and Kosovo, keeping the peace between Egypt and Ethiopia and getting some Middle East countries to establish relations with Israel. Then he said it didn't necessarily matter if he won the prize because 'the people know and that's all that matters to me!'. – Bloomberg


Bloomberg
21-06-2025
- Politics
- Bloomberg
Pakistan Backs Trump for Nobel Peace Prize He's Long Craved
Pakistan said it will nominate US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, a move that may have as much to do with annoying rival India as it does with building stronger ties to Washington. The recommendation is being made for Trump's 'decisive intervention and pivotal leadership during the recent India-Pakistan crisis,' according to a social media post on Saturday by Pakistan's government.


The Guardian
09-05-2025
- Politics
- The Guardian
Pakistan says three air bases attacked by Indian missiles
Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature Hello and welcome to our coverage of the India-Pakistan crisis. Pakistan's army spokesman says India has fired missiles at three air bases inside the country, but most of the missiles have been intercepted. Lt Gen Ahmad Sharif said all Pakistan air force assets were safe. He made this announcement during his televised address, saying some of the Indian missiles had also hit India's eastern Punjab. The news comes after Pakistan was accused of launching a fresh wave of drone strikes against India, with projectiles reported over the states of Indian-administered Kashmir and Punjab. The allegations were yet another alarming confrontation between India and Pakistan, two nuclear-armed countries, since India's missile strikes on nine sites in Pakistan on Wednesday killed 31 people. Those strikes in turn were India's response to an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir late last month, in which militants killed 25 Hindu tourists and a guide. Follow the developments with us. Share


BBC News
09-05-2025
- Politics
- BBC News
Kashmir: What's the way out of the India and Pakistan crisis?
As the continuing India-Pakistan crisis takes a dangerous turn, nations around the world are urging initial thinking was that after India launched air strikes, and with Pakistan claiming to have shot down several Indian jets - a claim Delhi has not confirmed - both sides could claim "victory" and there's a danger that any protracted tit-for-tat attacks could lead them to a far more damaging past conflicts, such as in 2019 and 2016, it was the United States and a few other global powers that put pressure on Delhi and Islamabad to bring the situation under control and de-escalate. Now passions are running high and the nationalist rhetoric has reached a crescendo on both sides. The neighbours are closer to war than in recent Why India and Pakistan fight over itWhat we know about India's strikes on Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir'The World community is keeping quiet; that's dangerous,' Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani academic who is a senior fellow at King's College London. 'Though the flare up has been happening for decades, this is the first time the two countries find themselves in a conflict without anyone monitoring them or forcefully telling them to stop,' she Washington gets more involved, Islamabad and Delhi may continue with their accusations and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has been telling the senior leaders of India and Pakistan to de-escalate, the message from other American leaders is Vice-President JD Vance has said that a potential war between India and Pakistan would be "none of our business" during an interview with Fox News."We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can't control these countries, though," Vance was on a visit to India when the militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 26 civilians, took President Donald Trump had earlier called rising tension between India and Pakistan a "shame". During previous India-Pakistan skirmishes, for example in 2019, tension was defused quickly after India carried out what it called 'surgical strikes' on what it called terrorist camps inside Indian military jet was shot down in the aftermath of the crisis and the pilot was captured by Pakistan. He was released two days later after reported intervention from Washington and other world powers. But the intensity of the current conflict is different and passions are running high on both the Trump administration's priorities are more about tariffs, China and Ukraine-Russia, it may require a concerted attempt by the international community to lower tension between the two nuclear-armed other world power which has a stake in South Asia is China. Beijing has close economic and military ties with Islamabad. It has invested more than $50bn (£37.5bn) in Pakistan as parts of its China-Pakistan Economic Corridor to boost also has unresolved border issues with India and the two countries recently had a border clash in the Himalayan region 2020. Despite the tension, China is the second largest trading partner of India."If the US is uninterested [in resolving India-Pakistan tension] then other permanent members of the UN Security Council – P5 - should get involved. It is their responsibility as well," Shen Dingli, a Shanghai-based international affairs expert tells the India accuses Pakistan of supporting the Kashmiri separatist rebels, who carried out the deadly attack on tourists last month, the Chinese academic says "the P-5 members can launch a credible investigation into the incident", to address India's concerns. Gulf states like Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have close ties to both the countries, could step up their mediation Arabian Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel Al-Jubeir arrived in Delhi on 7 May in what was seen as a surprise visit amid the backdrop of a spike in tensions between India and Pakistan. 'A good meeting with Adel Al-Jubeir," Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said, adding that his counterpart 'shared India's perspective on firmly countering terrorism'.The Saudi minister arrived in Islamabad on Friday for talks with Pakistan's are an estimated 2.6 million Pakistanis living and working in the Gulf Kingdom. Riyadh has considerable influence in Arabia has loaned billions of dollars to Pakistan to bail out the country during economic crises over the way out of the current crisis could be a situation where both sides can claim victory to satisfy their says the missile strikes on suspected militant hideouts inside Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir were part of a commitment to hold 'accountable' those responsible for the last month's attack in Pahalgam. 'India has already said it has achieved its objectives. Now, the ball is in Pakistan's court. If they wish to retaliate then that would elicit a strong response from India,' retired Indian Lt Gen D S Hooda said. For Pakistan, especially for its powerful military, it would want to show its people that it can stand up against India and teach it a lesson once again by downing five of the Indian air force jets during a dog fight. India has not acknowledged the loss of any of its fighter jets in the current according to Pakistani academic Siddiqa, how the current crisis ends depends on what India's stated objectives are.'India's goal posts keep changing day by day – from punishing Pakistan to attaining something more,' she said. You may also be interested in: