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Trump's Kashmir mediation remarks to hit Indo-US ties?

Washington: Donald Trump's controversial remarks that Prime Minister Narendra Modi sought his mediation on resolving the Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan will "damage" bilateral ties, according to former diplomats and experts, with one of them saying the US president did not do his homework.

India has already firmly rejected Trump's claim, which he made on Monday during a meeting with Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan at the White House, saying that New Delhi's consistent position has been that all outstanding issues with Pakistan are discussed only bilaterally.

"I would like to categorically state that no such request has been made by the Prime Minister to the US President," External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said in Rajya Sabha on Tuesday. Reacting to Trump's statement, former US Ambassador to India Richard Verma told PTI that "The President did a lot of damage today. His comments on Kashmir and Afghanistan were way off the mark." According to Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistan Ambassador to the US, the President would soon learn the complexity of South Asian issues. "President Trump wants Pakistan's help with a deal on Afghanistan and has dangled the prospect of help with what he thinks Pakistan wants," he said. "He praised Imran Khan like he praised North Korea's Kim Jong-un. This is his standard procedure in trying to get a deal," he noted.

"Just as he has not got a deal on the Korean peninsula, he will soon learn that South Asia's historical issues are also more complex than fashioning a real estate deal," Haqqani said. Former State Department diplomat Alyssa Ayres, who is now with the Council for Foreign Relations think tank, said Trump did not come prepared for the meeting.

"I am worried about the President's lack of preparation for his meetings, and his impromptu statements. His statement on Kashmir today (that PM Modi sought mediation from Trump) was categorically denied by the Indian government within hours," Ayres told PTI. "Diplomacy requires careful attention to detail, to language, and to the facts of history. We did not see that today," she said in response to a question.Nicholas Burns, who served as under Secretary of State for Political Affairs under the Bush Administration and played a key role in the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, said the Indian government has been consistent for many years in rejecting the US as a mediator in the Kashmir dispute.

The former diplomats and experts were responding to questions on President Trump's remarks that he is ready to mediate between India and Pakistan on the contentious Kashmir issue. PTI

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