Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pak Flaunts, Then Downplays Nawaz Sharif's Call With Trump: Foreign Media

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Dec, 2016 01:00 PM
    The morning papers were giddy with hyperbole on Thursday over the news that Donald Trump had spoken to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif by phone a day earlier and showered compliments on a country he once accused of "betrayal and disrespect" - even offering to help the nuclear power solve its problems abroad.
     
    " 'Call me anytime,' Trump tells PM," touted the Express Tribune, describing the "instant rapport" between the two leaders during the congratulatory call initiated by Sharif.
     
    His office then released a readout of the call.The newspaper also suggested that the U.S. president-elect, who called Pakistan a "fantastic country" with "fantastic people," might "prove to be Islamabad's good friend."
     
     
    By the end of the day, though, the official tone had become more circumspect, and commentators were skeptical that Trump, who has little foreign policy experience and close business relations with Pakistan's archrival India, really was ready to weigh in on the thorny issues that have long roiled the Muslim-majority nation's international relations.
     
    "Our relationship with the United States is not about personalities, it is about institutions," said Nafees Zakaria, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry. Describing Sharif's gesture as a "courtesy call," Zakaria said Pakistan would welcome any effort by Trump to ease regional tensions, but the spokesman added, "We do not comment on bilateral relations between sovereign countries."
     
     
    Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri, an analyst and former foreign minister, observed that although "Mr. Trump is a warmhearted person," he "lacks expertise in foreign policy" and is not yet in office. Noting the obvious "excitement" shown by Sharif's office over the conversation, Kasuri said, "One nice call . . . is not something we read too much into." Trump, he added archly, "could have been equally effusive with Indian Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi."
     
    The reaction in India, not surprisingly, was cooler still. India and Pakistan have been at loggerheads over the Himalayan region of Kashmir for decades, but India has always opposed Pakistan's desire to have the United States or other countries play a mediation role. Tensions have escalated in recent months, with deadly border attacks against Indian forces and harsh repression of protesters in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir.
     
     
     
    "Insofar as the fantastic conversation is concerned . . . I would reserve my judgment," said Vikas Swarup, a spokesman for India's Ministry of External Affairs. "We have seen only a one-sided version of that conversation." Swarup said India would welcome a "dialogue" between Pakistan and the United States to resolve outstanding issues but specified that "the most outstanding" issue is "Pakistan's continued support to cross-border terrorism."
     
    Many comments posted on social media in India were derisive and mocking, as were many comments from Pakistanis. Some made fun of Sharif, who is accused of hiding financial assets abroad, casting him as desperate for foreign friends. Some derided both leaders as corrupt "scammers" who would get along famously as a result.
     
    "So where is the new Trump Tower in Pakistan actually going to be?" one post asked.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs
    BEIJING — Surgeons from around the world gathered at a conference in Beijing on Monday in China's latest effort to fight persistent skepticism about whether its hospitals have stopped performing transplants with the organs of executed prisoners.

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa
    Hate crime charges have been filed by authorities against a group of men who brutally attacked a 41-year-old Sikh-American man, knocking off his turban and cutting his unshorn hair with a knife.

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud
    Veteran Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi and legendary batsman Javed Miandad have resolved their differences after an ugly spat which even saw underworld don Dawood Ibrahim getting involved.

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now
    "As you have seen, I am a victim of one of the great political smear campaigns in the history of our country," CNN quoted Trump as saying on Friday at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now

    Woman Found Dead At Wealthy Indian-Origin Man Harcharanjit Matharu's Family House In UK

    Woman Found Dead At Wealthy Indian-Origin Man Harcharanjit Matharu's Family House In UK
    Harcharanjit Matharu, 58, his wife Baldev, 60, and daughters Ranjeeta, 26, and Rupinder, 33, are believed to reside in the one-million-pound home in the upmarket neighbourhood of Gerrards Cross in Buckinghamshire.

    Woman Found Dead At Wealthy Indian-Origin Man Harcharanjit Matharu's Family House In UK

    Delegitimise All Terror Groups Operating On Your Soil: US Tells Pakistan

    Delegitimise All Terror Groups Operating On Your Soil: US Tells Pakistan
    We Continue To Urge Pakistan To Take Action To Combat And Delegitimise All Terrorist Groups Operating On Its Soil

    Delegitimise All Terror Groups Operating On Your Soil: US Tells Pakistan