logo
India's diplomatic ambitions tested as Trump pushes for deal on Kashmir

India's diplomatic ambitions tested as Trump pushes for deal on Kashmir

Straits Times11-05-2025
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shake hands as they attend a joint press conference at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 13, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
Air Marshal AK Bharti, Lieutenant General Rajiv Ghai, Vice Admiral AN Pramod and Major General SS Sharda attend a press briefing at the National Media Centre in New Delhi, India, May 11, 2025. REUTERS/Priyanshu Singh
People attend the cremation of IAF (Indian Air Force) soldier Surendra Kumar who died during an attack on Udhampur, on the day of his funeral in Mahradasi village, Jhunjhunu in Rajasthan, India, May 11, 2025. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
An Indian security personnel stands guard on a street, following clashes between India and Pakistan, in Srinagar, Kashmir May 9, 2025. REUTERS/Sharafat Ali
NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD - India and Pakistan have stepped back from the brink of all-out war, with a nudge from the U.S., but New Delhi's aspirations as a global diplomatic power now face a key test after President Donald Trump offered to mediate on the dispute over Kashmir, analysts said.
India's rapid rise as the world's fifth-largest economy has boosted its confidence and clout on the world stage, where it has played an important role in addressing regional crises such as Sri Lanka's economic collapse and the Myanmar earthquake.
But the conflict with Pakistan over Kashmir, which flared up in recent days with exchanges of missiles drones and air strikes that killed at least 66 people, touches a sensitive nerve in Indian politics.
How India threads the diplomatic needle - courting favour with Trump over issues like trade while asserting its own interests in the Kashmir conflict - will depend in large part on domestic politics and could determine the future prospects for conflict in Kashmir.
"India ... is likely not keen on the broader talks (that the ceasefire) calls for. Upholding it will pose challenges," said Michael Kugelman, a South Asia analyst based in Washington.
In a sign of just how fragile the truce remains, the two governments accused each other of serious violations late on Saturday.
The ceasefire, Kugelman noted, was "cobbled together hastily" when tensions were at their peak.
Trump said on Sunday that, following the ceasefire, "I am going to increase trade, substantially, with both of these great nations".
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for his part, has not commented publicly on the conflict since it began.
India considers Kashmir an integral part of its territory and not open for negotiation, least of all through a third-party mediator. India and Pakistan both rule the scenic Himalayan region in part, claim it in full, and have fought two wars and numerous other conflicts over what India says is a Pakistan-backed insurgency there. Pakistan denies it backs insurgency.
"By agreeing to abort under U.S. persuasion ... just three days of military operations, India is drawing international attention to the Kashmir dispute, not to Pakistan's cross-border terrorism that triggered the crisis," said Brahma Chellaney, an Indian defence analyst.
For decades after the two countries separated in 1947, the West largely saw India and Pakistan through the same lens as the neighbours fought regularly over Kashmir. That changed in recent years, partly thanks to India's economic rise while Pakistan languished with an economy less than one-10th India's size.
But Trump's proposal to work towards a solution to the Kashmir problem, along with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's declaration that India and Pakistan would start talks on their broader issues at a neutral site, has irked many Indians.
Pakistan has repeatedly thanked Trump for his offer on Kashmir, while India has not acknowledged any role played by a third party in the ceasefire, saying it was agreed by the two sides themselves.
Analysts and Indian opposition parties are already questioning whether New Delhi met its strategic objectives by launching missiles into Pakistan on Wednesday last week, which it said were in retaliation for an attack last month on tourists in Kashmir that killed 26 men. It blamed the attack on Pakistan - a charge that Islamabad denied.
By launching missiles deep into Pakistan, Modi showed a much higher appetite for risk than his predecessors. But the sudden ceasefire exposed him to rare criticism at home.
Swapan Dasgupta, a former lawmaker from Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, said the ceasefire had not gone down well in India partly because "Trump suddenly appeared out of nowhere and pronounced his verdict".
The main opposition Congress party got in on the act, demanding an explanation from the government on the "ceasefire announcements made from Washington, D.C."
"Have we opened the doors to third-party mediation?" asked Congress spokesperson Jairam Ramesh.
And while the fighting has stopped, there remain a number of flashpoints in the relationship that will test India's resolve and may tempt it to adopt a hard-line stance.
The top issue for Pakistan, diplomats and government officials there said, would be the Indus Waters Treaty, which India suspended last month but which is a vital source of water for many of Pakistan's farms and hydropower plants.
"Pakistan would not have agreed (to a ceasefire) without U.S. guarantees of a broader dialogue," said Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, a former foreign minister and currently chairman of the People's Party of Pakistan, which supports the government.
Moeed Yusuf, former Pakistan National Security Advisor, said a broad agreement would be needed to break the cycle of brinksmanship over Kashmir.
"Because the underlying issues remain, and every six months, one year, two years, three years, something like this happens and then you are back at the brink of war in a nuclear environment," he said. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Peace offering? Trump's Nobel Prize obsession
Peace offering? Trump's Nobel Prize obsession

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

Peace offering? Trump's Nobel Prize obsession

WASHINGTON: A craving for international prestige, a decade-long rivalry with former US president Barack Obama and perhaps a dash of provocation: A mercurial melange of factors is at play in Donald Trump's obsession with the Nobel Peace Prize. "It's well past time that President Trump was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Jul 31, prompting reactions of disbelief and sarcasm from the Republican leader's opponents. Since his Jan 20 return to power, the US president "has brokered, on average, one peace deal or ceasefire per month", Leavitt said, citing as examples his mediations between India and Pakistan; Cambodia and Thailand; Egypt and Ethiopia; Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC); Serbia and Kosovo; and others. His leading spokeswoman also mentioned Iran, where Trump ordered US strikes against Tehran's nuclear facilities, as evidence of decisions Leavitt claims have contributed to world peace. She made no mention of the conflict in Ukraine, which Trump pledged multiple times to end on "day one" of his term, or the war in Gaza, which rumbles on and for which the US supplies Israel with weapons. PAKISTAN, ISRAEL, CAMBODIA For some foreign leaders, mentioning the prestigious award has become a sign of diplomatic goodwill toward an American president who envisions himself as a peacemaker. Pakistan nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, as did Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol also said on Friday his country would do the same. During an early July meeting at the White House, a journalist asked the presidents of Liberia, Senegal, Mauritania, Guinea-Bissau, and Gabon whether Trump deserved the award. Basking in the flattering responses from the African leaders, a smiling Trump said: "We could do this all day long." Tens of thousands of people can offer a nomination to the Nobel committee, including lawmakers, ministers, certain university professors, former laureates and members of the committee themselves. Law professor Anat Alon-Beck, who is an Israeli-American, submitted Trump's name to the committee's five members, who were appointed by the Norwegian parliament. The assistant professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law told AFP she did so because of the "extraordinary leadership" and "strategic brilliance" he has shown, in her opinion, in advancing peace and securing the release of hostages held in the Gaza Strip. "NEVER" GETTING THE NOBEL For some, the prospect of handing the prize to someone who has upended the international order is untenable. "Nominating Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize is like entering a hyena in a dog show," US history and politics researcher Emma Shortis wrote on news site The Conversation. "Of course Trump does not deserve it." The American president disagrees. "I deserve it, but they will never give it to me," Trump told reporters in February as he hosted Netanyahu at the White House, lamenting not ticking the Nobel box in his life. "No, I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize no matter what I do, including Russia/Ukraine, and Israel/Iran, whatever those outcomes may be," Trump again griped on his Truth Social platform in June. "But the people know, and that's all that matters to me!" Trump is well-known as someone who is particularly fond of accolades and prizes, Garret Martin, a professor of international relations at American University, told AFP, "so he would welcome this major international recognition". And since the beginning of his presidential ambitions 10 years ago, "he has put himself in opposition to Barack Obama, who famously won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009", Martin added. The prize awarded to the Democratic former president, barely nine months after he took office, sparked heated debate - and continues to do so. "If I were named Obama I would have had the Nobel Prize given to me in 10 seconds," Trump bellyached in October 2024, during the final stretch of the presidential campaign. 338 CANDIDATES Three other US presidents have also been so honoured: Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Jimmy Carter. The prize was also awarded to Henry Kissinger in 1973 for his efforts to help end the war in Vietnam. The choice of the one-time US secretary of state was heavily criticised. The full list of Nobel Peace Prize nominees is confidential - except for individual announcements by sponsors - but their number is made public. In 2025, there are 338 nominees.

Trump's crackdown leaves LA's undocumented migrants on brink of homelessness
Trump's crackdown leaves LA's undocumented migrants on brink of homelessness

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Trump's crackdown leaves LA's undocumented migrants on brink of homelessness

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox US President Donald Trump's anti-immigration offensive is taking an added toll on Latino workers, who were already among the worst-affected victims of the region's housing crisis. BUENA PARK, United States – When her husband was arrested in an immigration raid near Los Angeles i n July , Ms Martha was abruptly separated from the father of her two daughters. But she also lost the salary that allowed her to keep a roof over their heads. 'He's the pillar of the family... he was the only one working,' said the undocumented woman, using a pseudonym for fear of reprisals. 'He's no longer here to help us, to support me and my daughters.' Los Angeles, where one-third of residents are immigrants – and several hundred thousand people are undocumented – has been destabilised by intensifying Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids under the Trump administration. Since returning to power, US President Donald Trump has delivered on promises to launch a wide-ranging deportation drive, targeting undocumented migrants but also ensnaring many others in its net. After her husband's arrest, 39-year-old Martha has joined the ranks of people barely managing to avoid ending up on the streets of Los Angeles County – a region with prohibitively high housing prices, and the largest number of homeless people in the United States outside New York. Her 700-square-foot apartment in Buena Park, a suburb of the California metropolis, costs US$2,050 (S$2,600) per month. After her husband's arrest, she urgently found a minimum-wage night job in a factory to cover their most pressing needs. It pays just enough to keep them afloat, but has left Ms Martha unable to cover a range of obligations. 'I have to pay car insurance, phone, rent and their expenses,' she said, pointing to her six- and seven-year-old daughters, who need school supplies for the new academic year. 'That's a lot of expenses.' Bigger storm brewing How long can she keep up this punishing schedule, which allows her barely three hours of sleep on returning from the factory before having to wake and look after her daughters? 'I couldn't tell you,' she said, staring blankly into space. Los Angeles has seen some of the worst of the ICE raids. Squads of masked agents have targeted hardware stores, car washes and bus stops, arresting more than 2,200 people in June. About 60 per cent of these had no prior criminal records, according to internal ICE documents analysed by AFP. Mr Trump's anti-immigration offensive is taking an added toll on Latino workers, who were already among the worst-affected victims of the region's housing crisis, said Ms Andrea Gonzalez, deputy director of the Clean Carwash Workers Center, a labour rights non-profit. 'A bigger storm is brewing. It's not just about the people that got picked up, it's about the people that are left behind as well,' she said. 'There is a concern that people are going to end up on the streets.' Her organisation is helping more than 300 struggling households whose incomes have plummeted, either because a family member has been arrested or because they are too afraid to return to work. It has distributed more than US$30,000 to help around 20 families who are unable to afford their rent, but covering everyone's needs is simply 'not sustainable', said Ms Gonzalez. An emergency Local Democratic Party leaders are trying to establish financial aid for affected families. Los Angeles County is planning a dedicated fund to tackle the problem, and city officials will also launch a fund using philanthropic donations rather than taxpayer money. Some families should receive 'a couple hundred' dollars, Mayor Karen Bass said i n July . But for Ms Gonzalez, these initiatives do not 'even scratch the surface' of what is needed, representing less than 10 per cent of most affected families' rent requirements. She called for a 'moratorium on evictions' similar to one introduced during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. Otherwise, Los Angeles' homeless population – currently numbered at 72,000, which is down slightly in the past two years – risks rising again, she warned. 'What we're living through right now is an emergency,' said Ms Gonzalez. Ms Maria Martinez's undocumented immigrant husband was arrested in June at a carwash in Pomona, a suburb east of Los Angeles. Since then, the 59-year-old has had to rely on help from her children to pay her US$1,800 monthly rent. Her US$1,000 disability allowance falls far short. 'It is stressful,' she said. 'We're just getting by.' AFP

Big Tech earnings strength is bright light in murky stock market
Big Tech earnings strength is bright light in murky stock market

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Big Tech earnings strength is bright light in murky stock market

The Nasdaq 100 index remains up more than 30 per cent off its low from early April. NEW YORK – Wall Street had a lot riding on whether this week's big-tech earnings would meet increasingly high expectations. By and large, the companies delivered. The stock market finished the week on a down note with the selloff on Aug 1, which was in part sparked by mixed results from after the market closed on July 31, as well as a weak jobs report and fears about the economic impact of President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs. But for the most part, investors looking for strength from technology companies to justify their market leadership found plenty of it in their reports. 'The sector is proving itself to have something like Teflon status, as fundamentals look strong, revenue growth has come in quite significantly higher than expected, and margins remain relatively healthy,' said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles Schwab & Co. 'While things aren't perfect, and valuations are nearing a level that has acted as a ceiling in the past, we still have a high degree of optimism, especially as we go up the market-cap spectrum.' Alphabet started the season off by reporting strong sales, lifted by artificial intelligence. Last week, Apple posted its strongest revenue growth in more than three years, while Meta Platforms spiked to a record as it beat expectations and outlined aggressive spending on AI. Microsoft Corp. reported robust strength in its cloud business on the back of AI demand, enough to temporarily lift it to a US$4 trillion market capitalisation, only the second company ever to do so. The stock has risen for 10 straight weeks, its longest streak since 2023. Amazon was the exception, offering a tepid forecast due to relatively slow growth in its cloud-computing division and heavy investments into AI. From here, investors will turn to chip behemoth Nvidia, which reports at the end of the month. The Nasdaq 100 Index finished the week down 2.2 per cent, with much of the drop coming on Aug 1. However, the Nasdaq 100 remains up more than 30 per cent off its low from early April, while the Mag Seven Index is up more than 40 per cent. Those gains are raising questions among some Wall Street pros about whether the rally in tech has become overly stretched. The Nasdaq 100 is trading at nearly 27 times estimated earnings, well above its 10-year average of 22. Overall, however, none of the companies that have reported are showing dramatically weakening fundamentals, which is particularly important as uncertainty continues to swirl around the impact of trade policy and tariffs. More than 96 per cent of tech firms in the S&P 500 Index have topped expectations for profits, while roughly 93 per cent have for revenue, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. For the index overall, the beat rates stand at 82 per cent for earnings and 68 per cent for revenue. While Wall Street has long been broadly positive on big tech, last week's results reinforced it's continuing potential. The Magnificent Seven are expected to see earnings growth of 24.2 per cent this year, a dramatic increase from the 21.4 per cent pace that was predicted just a month ago, according to Bloomberg Intelligence data. Revenues are anticipated to rise 13.4 per cent, up from the 11.5 per cent pace seen in early July. Of course, that level of growth would represent a deceleration from last year, when the Mag Seven's net income rose 36 per cent and revenue gained 14 per cent. But the group continues to outgrow the broader market, which is expected to see earnings expand by 8.9 per cent in 2025 on revenue growth of 5.5 per cent. 'This slowing is understandable given how quickly these names were growing, and for how long,' said Mr Michael Nell, a senior investment analyst and portfolio manager at UBS Asset Management. 'We're not seeing the kind of dramatic deceleration that would be a cause for concern, just a reflection that these large companies can't grow to the sky forever.' Now investors are waiting on Nvidia, the chipmaker at the heart of the AI boom and the world's biggest company, which is scheduled to release its earnings on Aug 27. Advanced Micro Devices, its much-smaller rival in AI processors, reports on Aug 5. The bottom line for both is that big tech reaffirmed their intention to continue spending on AI, as Meta, Microsoft, Alphabet and Amazon all increased their plans for capital expenditures. That represents a cluster of encouraging data points for Nvidia, which derives more than 40 per cent of its revenue from those four companies, according to supply chain data compiled by Bloomberg. 'Use cases for AI are emerging and some companies are already seeing a payoff, meaning this isn't speculative anymore,' Mr Nell said. 'That doesn't mean big tech can't get ahead of themselves and pull back, but tech is on an inexorable march to be a larger and larger part of the market. That's been the trend my whole career, and I don't know why it would stop now.' BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store