On Thursday, President Donald Trump said that he was the key factor in ending the India‑Pakistan crisis that was reignited by Operation Sindoor.
The former president blamed trade and tariffs for stopping dozens of wars around the world, saying that without the power to set tariffs he would not have averted “at least four of the seven wars.” He added that the U.S. “made hundreds of billions of dollars” and served as a peace‑keeper.
Trump also told reporters that the next Canadian prime minister – said to be Mark Carney – would come to Washington to talk about tariffs. He claimed a huge number of companies were moving from Canada, Mexico, China and other countries to the United States in a wave of trade migration.
On September 21, at the American Cornerstone Institute gala, Trump repeated his claim that he has driven through peace agreements between India and Pakistan, Thailand and Cambodia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, Kosovo and Serbia, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, and Rwanda and the Congo. He said that “60 percent of them” were stopped through trade.
The Indian Ministry of External Affairs has rejected Trump’s statements multiple times, and the Afghan‑Pakistani border remains live with tensions. Analysts say that Trump’s pitches are more political rhetoric than diplomatic fact.
Key topics: Donald Trump, U.S. diplomacy, India‑Pakistan conflict, Operation Sindoor, trade policy, tariffs, peace negotiations, Southeast Asia, Caucasus, Middle East.
Source: aninews
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