External Affairs Minister Jaishankar asked if India could rely on US President Donald Trump. Answer his answer: ‘What is the meaning?’ , Bharat News

External Affairs Minister Jaishankar asked if India could rely on US President Donald Trump. Answer his answer: 'What is the meaning?' , Bharat News

External Affairs Minister K Jaishankar weighed India’s foreign policy priorities and relations with major global players – including the United States under Donald Trump during his visit to Brussels this week. In a conversation with European Media Network UactiveHe was asked if India could trust Trump.

Jaishankar replied: “What do you mean?”. The interviewer then expanded the question, asking, “Is he (Trump) as good as his word? Is he ready to deepen relations with a fellow India?”

“I take the world as I think,” was Jaishankar’s answer. “Our aim is to pursue every relationship that fulfills our interests – and American relations are very important for us. This personality is not about X or President Y.”

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Jaishankar’s clear comments come as New Delhi and Washington, separately on American role in the end of enmity between India and Pakistan. The US President has often reiterated its claim of arbitration of peace between New Delhi and Islamabad, while India claimed that the decision was made bilaterally.

Speaking at an expedition program on 31 May, Trump once again said that “India and Pakistan were stopped fighting” by connecting him to de-ecstation “. “We talk about business, and we say we cannot do business with people who are shooting on each other and potentially using nuclear weapons … they understood and agreed, and they all stopped,” he said.

Celebration offer

Earlier, on 10 May, when two nuclear-country countries agreed to stop firing and military action, the United States Claimed to broke the ceasefire Trump said the two countries agreed to a complete and immediate ceasefire “after a long night of mediation by the United States”.

New Delhi has rejected such comments in the past and suggests that the ceasefire after Operation Sindoor was the result of direct bilateral connection with Pakistan. Indian authorities have underlined that no foreign government, including the United States, was unrelated to any security decision taken in the business dialogue sector with Washington.

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Jaishankar, who is in Brussels to meet leaders of the European Union (EU), also spoke about India’s foreign policy priorities from terrorism and trade to multi -polarity and global trust.

Bin Laden Ko Pahgam

On the recent clashes with Pakistan after the Pahalgam terror attack, Jaishankar urged the West to urge India’s response to India’s response as an anti-terrorism operation-not a border spat.

“This is not just an India-Pakistan issue. It’s about terrorism,” he said, “I remind me,” Oosama bin Laden lived in a Pakistani military city, next to his west point. It will eventually return to harass you. “

He also criticized international media coverage for reducing the status of “Tight-for-Tat” between the two atomic-host neighbors.

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Keeping in mind the discovery of Europe for “strategic autonomy”, Jaishankar said that multiple is already here. He said, “Europe should now decide on its abilities and interests … I use words like ‘strategic autonomy’ – these were once part of our vocabulary,” he commented.

Calling the European Union a “major pole” in global order, Jaishankar said: “That’s why I am here: to deepen my relationship in this multiplaler world.”

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