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EAM Jaishankar Confident India Can Work with Any Outcome of US Elections

August 13 :
On Tuesday, S. Jaishankar, India's minister of external affairs, stressed that the country can collaborate with any US president. India is certain that it will cooperate with whichever administration takes office in the United States, according to Jaishankar, who was speaking on the approaching US presidential elections.

The EAM made the remarks during the capital city's launch of Indiaspora's Impact report. We usually stay out of other people's election conversations since we'd like they not mention us. However, a decision will be rendered by the American system. And, I assure you, this is not merely a formality; rather, it is based on our experience over the past twenty years or so that we are confident in our ability to collaborate with the president of the United States, regardless of who holds that office," Jaishankar stated.

In addition, when asked about his take on the current state of affairs, Jaishankar remarked, "We are going through an exceptionally difficult period today," bringing attention to the continuing confrontations in Israel and Ukraine.

Problems that arise as a result of solutions don't usually bother me because I'm an optimistic person who prefers to focus on the solutions themselves. We are going through an extraordinarily tough era, I can say that with a lot of sobriety.

In addition, he warned that the next five years will bring nothing but bad news. Everything that's going on in the Middle East, Ukraine, Southeast Asia, and East Asia is a result of the ongoing effects of the COVID pandemic, which those of us who survived it take for granted, but which many others have not been able to overcome, according to Jaishankar.

In addition, EAM brought attention to the fact that several nations are currently facing economic difficulties.

With the global economic climate the way it is, more and more nations are finding it difficult to make ends meet. Foreign exchange shortages are making their trading more difficult, which is causing disruptions of many kinds, he said. Jaishankar went on to say that current climate events are also having disruptive implications on a global scale.

Climate events like the one in the Red Sea are now more than simply headlines. I mean, they cause havoc on a worldwide scale, and occasionally whole nations' economies collapse as a result," he remarked.