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What's interesting to know is that they submitted him for a Nobel Peace Prize after he helped negotiate a deal between India and Pakistan. It was probably something he pushed for because that's not normally what countries do after somebody helps them to broker a deal.
Wasn't his involvement pretty minimal anyway?
https://www.news18.com/india/trump-wasnt-directly-involved-shashi-tharoor-on-india-pakistan-ceasefire-9394156.html
Or is that spin from India? Somewhere in between?
I mean Pakistan felt compelled to at least put his name in for the Nobel Peace Prize. That means he probably did something but who knows how much she was actually involved for whether or not this is all just a political stunt.
I also remember reading somewhere that India was the one that called Trump to negotiate a ceasefire after Pakistan responded. I can't tell what's misinformation this day without spending a ton of time researching the history of the topic
Paraphrased by Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_India%E2%80%93Pakistan_conflict#Analysis
Like it said, seems like India assumed the modest level of mediation would be confidential (clear miscalculus on their part), while Pakistan, err, trumped up the magnitude of the intervention to paint themselves in a better light, possibly because they're at a military disadvantage, and felt grateful for the help.
Seems like there was some backchannel involvement from many countries (like "Saudi Arabia, Iran, the UAE and the UK" and indeed the US), but Trump couldn't help himself and loudly claimed credit before the ceasefire was even announced.
Now India's annoyed (hence their flat denial).
I like this explanation, it 'fits' all the involved characters, including Trump blotting out the sun and killing any nuance to the situation.
It seems like a really excellent response that's well informed and source well.
It does seem like the most plausible explanation