
The president of the United States, Donald Trump, on Wednesday once again praised the Mariscal de Campo as Munir, whom he recently met at the White House, and reiterated his position that he stopped the conflict last month between the Pakistan with nuclear and Indian weapons.
Going to a press conference after attending the Annual NATO summit in the Hauge, the president of the United States called the “most important” conflict of all recent, saying that both countries have nuclear weapons and ended it with a series of telephone calls in commerce.
“I said that you look if you are going to fight each other … I was getting very bad … I said that if you are going to fight each other, then we are not going to make commercial agreements,” Trump said.
Praising the Munir Marshal, Trump said: “I met General of Pakistan last week in my office, a very impressive personality, a great man.”
He also described the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a close friend, stating: “Modi is a great friend of mine. A great gentleman.”
“We make us reason and I said that we are not making any commercial agreement if you are going to fight … and you know what they said no, I want to make the commercial agreement and stopped a nuclear war,” he added.
President Trump said last month that the residents of southern Asia with nuclear weapons agreed to stop the fire after the conversations mediated by the United States and that hostilities ended after urging countries to focus on trade instead of war.
Islamabad had previously said that the high fire occurred after his military returned a call that the Indian Army had started on May 7.
Although Pakistan has praised and accredited President Trump for his role in Alto El Fuego, which he himself has highlighted on multiple occasions, India has denied any participation of the United States.
However, the president of the United States is registering its position and has even offered media in the long -standing background dispute between the two countries, a position also highlighted by the United States Department of State.
Meanwhile, the Pakistan government has also recommended Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize 2026, citing its “decisive diplomatic intervention” and “fundamental leadership” during the recent crisis between Pakistan and India.
On June 18, Indian Prime Minister Modi told Trump that the high fire was achieved through conversations between the Indian and Pakistani military and not US mediation, according to the most important diplomat in India, the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Vikram Misri.
The heaviest fight in decades between Pakistan and India was caused by an attack on April 22 in Jammu and Kashmira (Iiojk) of the Indians who killed 26 people, most of them tourists. New Delhi blamed Pakistan for the attack, a position denied by Islamabad.
In response to the cross-border strikes of India, Pakistan had launched the Bunyan-Mou-Marshusous operation after demolishing six Air Force aircraft of India, including three raffles in response to Indian aggression.
The two countries, after four days of armed conflict, agreed to stop the fire on May 10.