10.2 C
New York
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
HomeHeadline newsFormer Italy PM Silvio Berlusconi wanted Putin to defuse India-Pakistan standoff

Former Italy PM Silvio Berlusconi wanted Putin to defuse India-Pakistan standoff

Date:

Related stories

Ukraine posts subtle hint with ‘handshake emoji’ regarding the progress with US relations

High-level diplomatic talks between the United States and Ukraine...

Indian Americans favor Biden’s India policy over Trump’s, survey reveals

A recent survey conducted by the Carnegie Endowment for...

Indian student Praveen Kumar shot dead in US, second such incident in months

The Consulate General of India in Chicago has expressed...

Trump warns NATO allies: ‘No payment, no protection’

U.S. President Donald Trump has once again raised doubts...

Trump’s first Congress address: Gender, free speech, and economic plans

US President Donald Trump delivered his first address to...

 

ommented to me that this was ‘a terrible idea’ that could only complicate our efforts to handle the crisis.”

The India-Pakistan stand-off, following a terror attack on India’s parliament in 2001, threatened to escalate into a war between the two nuclear powers.

The newly released files also show Blair gifted silver cufflinks to Putin on his birthday.

Blair described Putin as a “Russian patriot” and advocated that the West should take him on board.

- Advertisement -

At a meeting with vice-president Dick Cheney at Camp David, Blair said “it was better to allow Putin a position on the top table and encourage Putin to reach for western attitudes as well as the western economic model”.

A Downing Street memo in January 2001 summarises Blair’s contacts with Putin, who had become Russia’s president less than a year earlier.

It says: “On NATO, Putin told the Prime Minister in Moscow that he did not want to be viewed as anti-NATO and would not try to slow down the process of NATO enlargement”.

However, the Russian defence minister Igor Sergeyev told his Nato counterparts any further expansion of the US-led military alliance would be a political error and his country would “take appropriate steps” in response.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories