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Donald Trump On India-Pakistan: Donald Trump said, “I figured you’d want to clear that up. But it’s the N-word. That’s a very nasty word, right?.”
US President Donald Trump (Reuters Image)
Donald Trump On India-Pakistan: US President Donald Trump referred to “nuclear” as “the N-word” while discussing the India-Pakistan conflict during a Fox News interview. “You know what the N-word is, right?” Donald Trump asked the Fox interviewer Bret Baier to which he responded, “Nuclear.”
Donald Trump confirmed, “Yeah,” prompting Bret Baier to say, “Thank you, thank you for the clarification.”
Following this, Donald Trump continued, “I figured you’d want to clear that up. But it’s the N-word. That’s a very nasty word, right? In a lot of ways.” He added that in a nuclear context, “that’s the worst thing that can happen.”
What Donald Trump Said On India-Pakistan
As he talked about his past efforts to de-escalate tensions between India and Pakistan, Bret Baier referenced the airstrikes exchanged by the two nations, stating, “You picked up the phone and called two nuclear powers, India and Pakistan, and got them to step back from the brink.”
Donald Trump responded, calling it “a bigger success than I’ll ever be given credit for.” He emphasized, “Those are major nuclear powers. Those are not like a little bit. And they were angry.”
He described how the situation had intensified, saying, “It was getting deeper and more, I mean, more missiles. Everyone was stronger, stronger to a point where the next one’s gonna be, you know what, the N-word.”
He also claimed the two countries were “very close” to dangerous escalation.
Donald Trump On India-Pak Ceasefire
Earlier, Donald Trump told American soldiers at a base in Qatar he “sure as hell helped settle the problem between India and Pak last week”, and that he had resolved a “more and more hostile situation”.
“I don’t want to say I did… but I sure as hell helped settle the problem between Pakistan and India last week, which was getting more and more hostile and, all of a sudden, you’ll start seeing missiles of a different type, and we got it settled,” he said.
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Washington D.C., United States of America (USA)
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