India, Trump and Pakistan
Digest more
Very good evening and welcome to Free Press Journal. With me is senior journalist and co-founder of SatyaHindi, Ashutosh. Thank you for joining us. Ashutosh: Good evening, Afrida. Thank you for having me.
2h
ET Now on MSNCooked up story? Donald Trump made false 'India, Pakistan trade' claims? No such PM Modi-Vance talk?On Monday evening, US President Donald Trump made another big claim that there could have been a bad nuclear war and they stopped it. “Millions of people could have been killed.” Additionally, Trump cited "trade" as the motivator behind both the countries agreeing to stop.
A series of military strikes last week by India and Pakistan brought the nuclear-armed rivals closer to a broader war.
Randhir Jaiswal said Pakistan is only “fooling itself” if it thinks it can escape the consequences of nurturing “terrorism on an industrial scale”
1h
The Manila Times on MSNPakistan: Over 50 slain in India clashes last weekISLAMABAD — Pakistan's army announced on Tuesday a new death toll of 40 civilians and 11 military service members killed last week in the country's worst confrontation with India in decades. The nuclear-armed South Asian neighbors engaged in four days of tit-for-tat strikes that threatened to escalate into all-out war before United States President Donald Trump announced on Saturday a ceasefire he claimed that Washington brokered.
Explore more
7h
New York Magazine on MSNWhat India Lost in Its Brief Battle With PakistanIndia hit Pakistan with airstrikes deep into the country, killing dozens, but Pakistan shot down multiple Indian planes. India accused Pakistan of a drone attack near the Kashmiri line of control, which Pakistan denied;
Pakistan had no plans on deploying nuclear warheads to strike India over the last week of fighting, the country’s foreign minister Ishaq Dar told CNN Monday.
23h
Asian News International on MSNWe expected PM Modi to respond to Trump's remarks, hyphenation with Pakistan is unacceptable: Pawan KheraCongress leader Pawan Khera on Monday criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi for not addressing US President Donald Trump's recent remarks during his speech on Operation Sindoor. Khera also reiterated that the "hyphenation" of India with Pakistan is unacceptable.