
The flag of Pakistan representing a 9/11 victim from that country, flies among American flags erected by students and staff from Pepperdine University in Malibu, who placed nearly 3,000 flags in the ground to honor the victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in New York, on September 10, 2010. — AFP
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Officials and analysts said that with US President Donald Trump’s Pakistani military chief, Lynch indicated a private diplomatic protest in a warning to Washington from India about the dangers of its bilateral relations, while New Delhi is refusing to have a hell with China.
He says the meeting and other tensions in the US relations in India have shadowed trade talks after decades of promotion, as the Trump administration weighs revenue against one of its major partners in the Indian Pacific.
India has accused Pakistan of supporting it, which makes it a name for cross -border terrorism and has told the United States that three senior Indian government officials directly familiar with the matter are sending false indications around Field Marshal Asim Munir.
He said he had made a traumatic place that would hinder the relationship.
Pakistan clearly denies the allegations that it supports militants who attack Indian targets and New Delhi has not provided any evidence that it is involved.
Despite the minor hiccups, US relations have been strengthened over the past two decades, at least partially because the two countries try to fight China.
Michael Koglman, a senior fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation think tank, said the current problems are different.
“The frequency and intensity with which the United States is engaged with Pakistan, and apparently do not keep Indian concerns, especially after India’s recent conflict with Pakistan, it has contributed a little to bilateral unrest.”
“This time, the concern is that one of the wider tension motivations, which, as an unexpected capacity of Trump, is spreading into the trading circle with his point of view of revenue,” he said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office and the Indian Foreign Ministry did not respond to the request to comment. The Foreign Ministry has already said that it has taken a “note” of the Trump-Maner meeting.
An American official said he did not comment on private diplomatic communication and that the United States had strong ties with both India and Pakistan.
“These relationships stand on their own qualities, and we do not compare our bilateral relations with each other,” the US official said.
Trump-Manier lunch
It seems that after a short dispute between rivals armed with nuclear weapons in May, the United States showed a different nature on Pakistan when India illegally had an illegal attack on the Indian Hindu community in Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) last month.
Four days after aerial dog fights, missiles and drone strikes, the two sides agreed to the ceasefire.
Hindu -majority India and Islamic Pakistan have fought regularly since independence in 1947 and two of them have fought three massive wars in the Kashmir region.
A few weeks after the May war, Trump hosted Munir for lunch in the White House, which was a huge promotion in relations with the country, to a great extent Trump’s first term and that under Biden. It was the first time that an American president hosted the Pakistan Army chief in the White House, which was fought by senior Pakistani civilian officials.
Referring to the Kashmir attack in May, Indian Foreign Minister Sabrhamnim Jaishankar said, “Tourists were killed in front of their family in front of their family.”
Pakistan says it is Modi who is driven by religious extremism, and its Hindu nationalism brand has violated the rights of India’s major Muslim minority. Modi and the Indian government say they do not discriminate against minorities.
Field Marshal Munir’s meeting in the White House has repeatedly increased India’s Chigraine on Trump’s insistence that he avoided the nuclear war between the two countries to stop trade talks with them. The comment reacted a sharp response from Modi, who told Trump that the ceasefire was achieved through dialogue between the Army commanders of the two countries, not the US arbitration.
In the days after his meeting with Munir on June 18, the people of Modi’s office and the Indian National Security Advisor’s office made separate calls to their US counterparts to file a protest, two officials said. The protests have not been reported before.
“We have informed the United States about cross -border terrorism, which is a red line for us,” said a senior Indian official. He added, “These are difficult times … Trump’s instability in understanding our concerns creates some sickness in relations.”
Trump and Munir discussed the continuation of counter -terrorism cooperation, under which the United States has previously provided weapons to Pakistan, which is a non -NATO US ally, and a Pakistani Red Out of the meeting said.
Two officials said it raised concerns in New Delhi that the weapons that Pakistan received from the United States could be replaced by India if neighboring countries were once again in conflict.
‘Access to China’
Indian officials and an Indian industry lobby said that despite the Boomi public exhibition between Trump and Modi, India has been taking a slightly strong stand against the United States in recent weeks, while trade debates have also decreased.
Modi refuses to invite Trump to Washington after a G7 meeting in Canada in June.
Earlier this month, New Delhi proposed a retaliation against the United States in the World Trade Organization, which shows that trade talks were not running as easily as they were before India’s clashes.
India’s Observer Research Foundation Think Tank’s Foreign Policy Head, said that India, like other countries, is trying to find a way to tackle Trump and recover relations with China as a hedge.
“Certainly China has access,” he said. “And I think it’s mutual … China is also arriving”.
Last week, Jaishkar of India made his first visit to Beijing after the border clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers in 2020.
India is also taking steps to reduce China’s investment sanctions, which were imposed after the 2020 conflict.
India and Beijing’s close ties have melted despite India’s thorny ties.
But New Delhi’s concern about Trump’s involvement with China, from reconciliation to confrontation, has participated in his stance on Beijing.
“With an unexpected deal maker at the White House, New Delhi cannot reject China and the United States efficacy,” said Christopher Cleary, an associate professor of political science at the University of New York, New York.
“India is worried about Chinese and Chinese influence in Pakistan and growing Chinese influence near India, like Bangladesh. Yet New Delhi has extensively concluded that it should focus its nearest pressure on China, not on its nearest neighbors, to respond to Chinese influence.”