India and Pakistan agree to a ceasefire, but will it hold? Here's what to knowNew Foto - India and Pakistan agree to a ceasefire, but will it hold? Here's what to know

India and Pakistanagreed to an immediate ceasefire on Saturday, unexpectedly halting the worst fighting in decades between the nuclear-armed neighbors, just when their tit-for-tat strikes appeared to be spiraling out of control. Although US President Donald Trump was the first to announce the ceasefire and claimed credit for it, contradictory accounts have emerged about the extent of US involvement in the agreement. Just hours after the announcement there have been reports of violations from both sides, raising questions about how long it will last. Here's what you need to know. Just before 8 a.m. ET, about 5 p.m. in India and Pakistan, Trump announced the ceasefire in a post on Truth Social. "After a long night of talks mediated by the United States, I am pleased to announce that India and Pakistan have agreed to a FULL AND IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE," Trump said, congratulating the leaders of both countries for "using common sense and great intelligence." Soon after, Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed that India and Pakistan had not only agreed to a ceasefire, but also "to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site." Rubio said that the ceasefire came after he and Vice President JD Vance spent the past two days speaking with senior officials from both countries. A minute later, Pakistan confirmed the ceasefire was effective immediately. Indian confirmation came soon after. India's Ministry of Information said the agreement was worked out "directly between the two countries," downplaying US involvement and contradicting Trump's claim. The ministry also said there was "no decision" to hold further talks. But Pakistani officials have heaped praise on Washington. "We thank President Trump for his leadership and proactive role for peace in the region," said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. A Pakistani source familiar with the negotiations told CNN that the US – and Rubio in particular – was instrumental in striking the deal, painting a picture of talks that were in doubt right until the truce was confirmed. It should not be surprising that these bitter rivals have given contradictory accounts of how the ceasefire was reached. India, which views itself as an ascendant superpower, has long been resistant to international mediation, whereas Pakistan, which is heavily dependent on foreign aid, tends to welcome it, analysts say. "India has never accepted mediation in any dispute, be it India-Pakistan or India-China, or any other," said Dr. Aparna Pande, research fellow for India and South Asia at the Hudson Institute, a think-tank in Washington, DC. "Pakistan, on the other hand, has always sought international mediation so they will praise it," she added, saying it is "the only way it can put pressure on India to discuss and resolve the Kashmir dispute." The fighting before Saturday's ceasefire was marked by claims, counterclaims and disinformation from both sides. Now that the conflict has paused, both sides are ramping up their efforts to shape perceptions of what the fighting achieved and how it ended. The afternoon's ceasefire is all the more surprising given the intensity of this morning's fighting. In the early hours of Saturday morning, Pakistan said India had launched missiles at several of its key military bases. It said the strikes spanned from sites in Pakistan-administered Kashmir to a military base close to its capital, Islamabad. In response, Pakistan said it fired back at military air bases in India. "An eye for an eye," its military said in a statement. Hours later, explosions were reported in Indian-administered Kashmir, including Srinagar, the region's largest city, and in the city of Jaamu. Sharif said Pakistan had delivered "a resounding reply" to Indian aggression. After four days of direct military strikes on the other's territory, many in the region feared that – in the absence of meaningful international pressure – the tit-for-tat strikes would continue to escalate. This round of fighting began in Kashmir, a disputed region that has been a flashpoint in India-Pakistan relations since both countries gained their independence from Britain in 1947. The two nations to emerge from the bloody partition of British India – Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan – both claim Kashmir in full, despite only controlling parts of it. Months after becoming independent, they fought the first of their three wars over the territory. On April 26, gunmen opened fire on sightseers in a popular travel destination in the mountainous destination of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir. At least 25 Indian citizens and one Nepali were killed in the massacre. New Delhi immediately blamed Islamabad, accusing it of supporting "cross-border terrorism." Pakistan has denied all involvement in the attack. Two weeks after the Pahalgam massacre, India on Wednesday launched a series of strikes on Pakistan and the parts of Kashmir it holds, calling the attack "Operation Sindoor." The theater of conflict since then has been far broader than in previous rounds of fighting, with both sides striking deep into the other's territory. Just two days ago, JD Vance downplayed the potential for US influence as the India-Pakistan conflict spiralled. "What we can do is try to encourage these folks to de-escalate a little bit, but we're not going to get involved in the middle of a war that's fundamentally none of our business and has nothing to do with America's ability to control it," Vance told Fox News on Thursday. Vance's about-face is a measure of how concerned the US – and the wider international community – became by the escalating conflict between the two nuclear powers. Trump administration officials told CNN that, after receiving alarming intelligence on Friday about the extent to which the conflict could escalate, the State Department felt it had no choice but to play a greater role in talks between the two sides Although India and Pakistan have stepped back from the brink for now, it remains to be seen whether the ceasefire will hold. India's Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri accused Pakistan of repeatedly violating the ceasefire agreement on Saturday, after explosions were heard in both the India- and Pakistan-administered parts of Kashmir. Pakistan also accused India of committing violations but stressed it "remains committed to a faithful implementation of the ceasefire." In the wake of the tourist massacre, the two announced a host of other reprisals: suspending visas, banning trade, while India suspended its participation in a crucial water-sharing pact. It is unclear yet whether such moves will be reversed. CNN's Rhea Mogul, Sophia Saifi, Esha Mitra, Aditi Sangal, Nic Robertson, Alayne Treene, Aishwarya S. Iyer, Kunal Seghal, Sophie Tanno and Mukhtar Ahmad contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

India and Pakistan agree to a ceasefire, but will it hold? Here’s what to know

India and Pakistan agree to a ceasefire, but will it hold? Here's what to know India and Pakistanagreed to an immediate ceasefire on Sat...
Fragile ceasefire holds between India, Pakistan as Trump offers more helpNew Foto - Fragile ceasefire holds between India, Pakistan as Trump offers more help

By Saurabh Sharma, Tariq Maqbool and Aftab Ahmed AMRITSAR, India/ MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan (Reuters) - A fragile ceasefire was holding between India and Pakistan on Sunday, after hours of overnight fighting between the nuclear-armed neighbours, as U.S. President Donald Trump said he will work to provide a solution regarding Kashmir. The arch rivals were involved in intense firing for four days, the worst in nearly three decades, with missiles and drones being fired at each other's military installations and dozens of people killed. A ceasefire agreement was reached after diplomacy and pressure from the United States, but within hours, artillery fire was witnessed in Indian Kashmir, the centre of much of the fighting. Blasts from air-defence systems boomed in cities near the border under blackout, similar to the previous two evenings, according to authorities, residents and Reuters witnesses. Late on Saturday, India said Pakistan had violated the understanding arrived to stop firing and that the Indian armed forces had been instructed to "deal strongly" with any repetition. In response, Pakistan said it was committed to the ceasefire and blamed India for the violations. By dawn, the fighting and explosions reported overnight had died down on both sides of the border, according to Reuters witnesses. Power was restored in most areas along India's border towns after a blackout the previous night. Trump praised leaders of both countries for agreeing to halt the aggression. "While not even discussed, I am going to increase trade, substantially, with both of these great nations. Additionally, I will work with you both to see if... a solution can be arrived at concerning Kashmir," Trump said in a post on Truth Social. In the border city of Amritsar, home to the Golden Temple revered by Sikhs, a siren sounded in the morning to resume normal activities brought a sense of relief and people were seen out on the roads. The fighting started on Wednesday, two weeks after 26 men were killed in an attack targeting Hindus in Pahalgam in Indian Kashmir. "Ever since the day terrorists attacked people in Pahalgam we have been shutting our shops very early and there was an uncertainty. I am happy that at least there will be no bloodshed on both sides," Satvir Singh Alhuwalia, 48, a shopkeeper in Amritsar told Reuters. Officials in Pakistan said there was some firing in Bhimber in Pakistani Kashmir overnight but nowhere else, and there were no casualties. The two countries, born out of British colonial rule in 1947, have gone to war three times - twice over the region of Kashmir. Hindu-majority India and Muslim Pakistan both rule part of Kashmir but claim it in full. India blames Pakistan for an insurgency in its part of Kashmir that began in 1989 and has killed tens of thousands. It also blames Pakistani Islamist militant groups for attacks elsewhere in India. Pakistan says it provides only moral, political and diplomatic support to Kashmiri separatists. The combined death toll in the recent skirmishes has reached nearly 70, officials have said. "More than me, my family is happy because my children and wife have been calling me every hour to check on me. Thank God the ceasefire happened," Guruman Singh, a security guard in Amritsar told Reuters. (Reporting by Aftab Ahmed in Jammu, Saurabh Sharma in Amritsar, Tariq Maqbool in Muzaffarabad, Charlotte Greenfield in Islamabad, Writing by Tanvi Mehta; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

Fragile ceasefire holds between India, Pakistan as Trump offers more help

Fragile ceasefire holds between India, Pakistan as Trump offers more help By Saurabh Sharma, Tariq Maqbool and Aftab Ahmed AMRITSAR, India/...
Putin says Russia ready for 'direct talks' with Ukraine as US and European leaders press for a ceasefireNew Foto - Putin says Russia ready for 'direct talks' with Ukraine as US and European leaders press for a ceasefire

Russian President Vladimir Putin has proposed holding "direct talks" with Ukraine on Thursday in Istanbul, as European leaders and the United States attempt to push Moscowto agree to a 30-day ceasefireto bring an end to the three-year conflict. "We would like to start immediately, already next Thursday, May 15, in Istanbul, where they were held before and where they were interrupted," Putin said in a rare late-night televised address. He emphasized the talks should be held "without any preconditions." "We are set on serious negotiations with Ukraine," Putin said, adding they are intended to "eliminate the root causes of the conflict" and "reach the establishment of a long-term, durable peace." The proposal came just hours after the leaders of Germany, France, the United Kingdom and Poland stood alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv and urged Putin to agree to a 30-day ceasefire starting on Monday or face possible "massive sanctions," according to French President Emmanuel Macron. The demand comes with the backing of the White House after a joint phone call with US President Donald Trump, the Europeans said. Hours after Putin's proposal on Sunday, Trump posted on his social network Truth Social that it was a "potentially great day for Russia and Ukraine!" "I will continue to work with both sides to make sure that it happens," he said, urging people to "think of the hundreds of thousands of lives that will be saved" from the "never ending bloodbath." Shortly after the European leaders called for the ceasefire, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that Russia is "resistant to any kind of pressure." "Europe is actually confronting us very openly," Peskov said, adding that Putin supports the idea of a ceasefire "in general," but "there are lots of questions" about the recent proposal that still need answering. He did not expand on what these questions are. Ukraine and Russia have not held direct talks since the early weeks of Moscow's invasion in 2022. Putin said Sunday he would speak with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan about holding talks with Kyiv. For two months now, Ukraine has said it wants an immediate 30-day ceasefire – a position promoted by Kyiv's key European allies, and also by Trump. Russia has so far refused to commit, saying it supports the idea of a 30-day pause in principle, but insists there are what it calls "nuances" that need addressing first. On Sunday, Putin denied that Moscow has refused dialogue with Kyiv and said the "decision now lies with the Ukrainian authorities." "We do not exclude that during these talks there will be a possibility to arrange some kind of new truce, a new ceasefire," he said. He called the proposed talks "a first step to a long-lasting stable peace but not a prologue to the continuation of an armed conflict after re-armament and re-equipping of Ukrainian armed forces and feverish digging of trenches in new strongholds." Putin has often spoken about the need to address what he calls "root causes" – which are taken to mean, among others, the eastward expansion of NATO. In an earlierTruth Socialpost on Thursday, Trump wrote that "if the ceasefire is not respected, the US and its partners will impose further sanctions,"adding to a sense he is growing frustratedwith Russian stalling. Trump has made ending the war in Ukraine one of his priorities and he has invested much effort into trying to get Putin on board. His special envoy Steve Witkoff went to Russia four times to meet with Putin and there have been several other high-level meetings between US and Russian officials since Trump returned to the White House in January. But despite offering some previously unthinkable concessions to Russia, the Trump administration has not been able to get Russia to agree to the limited ceasefire proposal, intended as opening a path towards a permanent truce. Last month, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio threatened the US would walk away from the talks if there is no progress. Instead, the US is now joining Ukraine's other Western allies in trying to put more pressure on Russia. Peskov told CNN Saturday that Russia is "very grateful" for Washington's mediation efforts, but added that "at the same time, it's quite useless to try to press on us." This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's Andrew Carey, Nick Paton Walsh, Lucas Lilieholm and Ivana Kottasova contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Putin says Russia ready for ‘direct talks’ with Ukraine as US and European leaders press for a ceasefire

Putin says Russia ready for 'direct talks' with Ukraine as US and European leaders press for a ceasefire Russian President Vladimir ...
Michael Porter Jr. coming up big for the Nuggets as he plays through pain of sprained left shoulderNew Foto - Michael Porter Jr. coming up big for the Nuggets as he plays through pain of sprained left shoulder

DENVER (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. hasn't really been able to take off his uniform by himself going on three weeks now because of asprained left shoulderthat has essentially turned him into a one-armed hoopster in these playoffs. He can't really guide his jump-shot with his left hand ever since he sprained his left A.C. joint in a scramble for a loose ball in Round 1 against the Los Angeles Clippers on April 22. It's hard for him to corral rebounds with both hands and he sometimes winces when passes drift to his left side. Not only that, but on the night he got hurt he revealed that the brace on his left foot was broken and that he'd had a hard time finding a replacement that fits properly. The brace helps him play through a condition called "dropped foot," that resulted from his multiple back surgeries earlier in his career. Yet, there he was picking up the slack on Nikola Jokic's off-night in Denver's 113-104Game 3 overtime winFriday night over the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder. "Even though playing through it makes it heal slower, they know it's not something that's dangerous to play with, per se," Porter said. "So, they're trusting me to go out there and space the floor, make it easier on other guys if I can and then I've just got to contribute on the glass and defensively as best I can and be ready to knock down open shots." With his left shoulder heavily bandaged and pumped full of Lidocaine, Porter did all of that and more Friday night. He scored 21 points on 7-of-10 shooting that included a 5-of-6 clip from deep and he pulled down eight rebounds, seven on the defensive glass, to counter OKC's swarming defense and offensive prowess. "When they shoot the ball it feels like the whole world is in the paint," Nuggetsinterim coach David Adelmansaid. "And you just have to win those and sometimes the ball gets tipped and you've got to play through the elbows and win the 50-50 knockout defensive rebounds because that leads to controlling the pace and getting our guys in a two-man game late." With Porter contributing at both ends of the floor, the Nuggets hung with the Thunder until Aaron Gordon's late 3 sent it to overtime, where Denver outscored Oklahoma City 9-2. Porter had expressed frustration after being held to 10 points total in Games 1 and 2 in Oklahoma City, where he shot a combined 3 for 18. He at least felt a little more like himself Friday night. "It's been tough, playoffs and I'm wanting to play at a high level," Porter said. Doctors told him sprained AC joints take four to six weeks to heal up enough for him to return to action. He said no way even knowing that he'd face severe limitations that would cut into his productivity and even playing time. "Suiting up I knew there would be games where I couldn't produce like I wanted to or maybe I didn't play as much as I wanted to," Porter said. "But this is the playoffs and I wanted to go out there and at least try. "It's been an up-and-down playoffs for me, but that's OK because we're in a good position as a team." The Nuggets can take a 3-1 lead with a win Sunday afternoon at Ball Arena. "When he first got hurt, it was like, damn, he's going to play through that? It's kind of crazy," teammate Jamal Murray said. "People don't understand what he's played through and how much he's played through his whole career. It's just a testament to his resilience and his love for the game and his will to win." ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Michael Porter Jr. coming up big for the Nuggets as he plays through pain of sprained left shoulder

Michael Porter Jr. coming up big for the Nuggets as he plays through pain of sprained left shoulder DENVER (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. hasn...
Denny Hamlin remains confident in antitrust case brought by 23XI and Front Row against NASCARNew Foto - Denny Hamlin remains confident in antitrust case brought by 23XI and Front Row against NASCAR

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Denny Hamlin said Saturday that he remains "pretty confident" in the case brought by his 23XI Racing, co-owned by the veteran driver and retired NBA great Michael Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports against NASCAR alleging antitrust violations. Hamlin spoke one day after a three-judge federal appellate panel indicatedit might overturn an injunctionthat allows 23XI and Front Row to race as chartered teams, even as theirlawsuit against the stock car seriesplays out in court. "You know, they're telling me kind of what's going on. I didn't get to hear it live or anything like that," Hamlin said after qualifying 14th forSunday's race at Kansas Speedway. "But we're overall pretty confident in our case." The teams filed the antitrust lawsuit against NASCAR on Oct. 2 in the Western District of North Carolina, arguing that the series bullied teams into signing charter agreements — essentially franchise deals — that make it difficult to compete financially. Those were the only two holdouts of 15 charter-holding teams that refused to sign the agreements in September. The most recent extension of the charters lasts until 2031, matching the current media rights deal. Perhaps the biggest benefit of them is that they guarantee 36 of the 40 spots available in each NASCAR race to teams that own them. Overturning the injunction would leave 23XI and Front Row racing as "open teams," meaning they'd have to qualify at every Cup Series event. But there are only four open spots, and 23XI had four cars at Kansas this week — Bubba Wallace, Riley Herbst, Tyler Reddick and Corey Heim — and Front Row had three with Noah Gragson, Zane Smith and Todd Gilliland. "You know, the judges haven't made any kind of ruling," Hamlin said, "so until they do, then we're going to stay status quo." NASCAR attorney Chris Yates had argued the injunction, granted in December by U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell, forced the series into an unwanted relationship with unwilling partners, and that it harms other teams because they earn less money. He also said that the teams should not have the benefits of the charter system they are suing to overturn. "There's no other place to compete," countered Jeffrey Kessler, the attorney representing 23XI and Front Row, noting overturning the injunction would cause tremendous damage to the teams, potentially including the loss of drivers and sponsors. "It will cause havoc to overturn this injunction in the middle of the season," Kessler said. There is a trial date set for December, and judge Steven Agee urged the sides to meet for mediation — previously ordered by a lower court — to attempt to resolve the dispute over the injunction. But that seems unlikely. "We're not going to rewrite the charter," Yates told the judges. ___ Associated Press writer Mike Barber in Richmond, Virginia, contributed to this report. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Denny Hamlin remains confident in antitrust case brought by 23XI and Front Row against NASCAR

Denny Hamlin remains confident in antitrust case brought by 23XI and Front Row against NASCAR KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Denny Hamlin said Sat...

 

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