US Congressman apologises for Trump’s ’embarrassing’ remark on Kashmir

US lawmakers support India’s stand on Kashmir, one of them apologises for Trump remarks

International:-A compelling Democratic Congressman on Tuesday apologized to India’s US emissary for President Donald Trump’s “humiliating” comments on Kashmir, while a few others turned out in help of New Delhi’s set up remain against any outsider job on the issue.

“I just apologized to Indian Ambassador Harsh Shringla for Trump’s crude and humiliating mix-up,” Congressman Brad Sherman tweeted hours after Trump’s dazzling case that Prime Minister Narendra Modi looked for his intercession or discretion endeavors to determine the Kashmir issue.

India immediately dismissed his cases.

For as far back as 70 years, India has reliably opposed any outsider intervention proposition, and for over 10 years now, the US has been emphasizing that Kashmir is a two-sided issue.

“Everybody who knows anything about international strategy in South Asia realizes that #India reliably contradicts outsider intercession re Kashmir. Everybody knows PM Modi could never propose a wonder such as this (sic),” tweeted Sherman, who has been firmly following the advancement in South Asia for recent decades.

“Trump’s announcement is unprofessional and fanciful. What’s more, humiliating, said Sherman who seats the House Foreign Affairs Sub-Committee on Asia, the Pacific and Non-Proliferation.

Later at night, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Alice Wells in a tweet said that Kashmir is a two-sided issue among India and Pakistan. “While Kashmir is a respective issue for the two gatherings to talk about, the Trump organization invites Pakistan and India plunking down and the United States stands prepared to help,” she tweeted.

Congressman Eliot L Engel, the Chairman of the ground-breaking House Committee on Foreign Affairs, talked with Shringla after Trump’s comments.

“Engel repeated his help for the longstanding US position on the Kashmir debate, saying he bolstered exchange among India and Pakistan, yet reaffirmed that the discourse’s pace and degree must be dictated by India and Pakistan,” said an announcement issued by the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

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