The United States has issued an official statement in which it has praised the intelligence head Tulsi Gabbard for the “fine understanding” of the Indo-Pacific sector. The statement came a few days after a visit to India, during which he held a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
During her visit, Ms. Gabbard spoke to NDTV World, where she spoke on several issues in the region including the situation in Bangladesh. He mentioned how the “oppression of minorities” in Bangladesh has increased and mentioned how the mindset of a “Islamist Khalifa” stems from extremism and violence. The statement was rejected by Bangladesh, which called it “misleading”.
What Tulsi Gabbard told NDTV
In a special interview in the NDTV World, the United States National Intelligence Director, Tulsi Gabbard said, “The misuse of the long -standing oppression, murder, and religious minorities such as Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and others has been a major area of concern for the US government and President Trump and his administration.”
In his comment, he talked about the ideology of a “Islamic Khalifa” and how extremist elements and terror groups target such results globally. “The threat of Islamist terrorists and the global effort of various terrorist groups are rooted in the same ideology and purpose – which is to rule or rule with an Islamic Khalifa,” he said, “he said,” It clearly affects people of any other religion, they are acceptable to take it, and they have chosen to take it with terror, and they have chosen to take it with terror, and they have chosen it with terror, and they are very violent methods and instruments and instruments and instruments “
The interim government of Bangladesh replied, saying, “This statement is both misleading and harmful to the image and reputation of Bangladesh, a nation whose traditional practice of Islam has been famous and peaceful and who has made significant progress in his fight against extremism and terrorism.”
Details by US Intelligence Department
A statement by DNI said, “Born and raised in the Indo-Pacific sector, DNI Gabbard understood a fine of the region’s important partnership and complex challenges.”
It states that Ms. Gabbard “discovered the opportunities of President Trump’s first policies in the Indo-Pacific region”.
The US Intelligence Head had several major meetings during his visit to India, including members of a Five Eyes Security Alliance. The meeting was hosted by Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, R&AW chief Ravi Sinha and Intelligence Bureau (IB) chief Tapan Deka.
He held meetings with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Foreign Minister S Jaishankar and Defense Minister Rajnath Singh. The US DNI’s statement said, “The journey highlights the decades of US-India relations, led by Prime Minister Modi and President Donald Trump, led by the leadership and friendship,” the US DNI statement said that “Gabard meetings in India focused on intelligence-sharing, defense, terrorism, and transfer threats.”
Ms. Gabard also participated in the annual global multilateral conference Razina Dialogue in Delhi, where she gave a key address on Donald Trump’s vision. “To achieve peace through strength, requires strong leadership with global challenges and obvious eyes and realistic understanding of opportunities,” he said.
The US State Department supports Gabbard, but also praises Bangladesh
Apart from the statement issued by the US Intelligence Department, the US State Department also supported him, saying that the United States repeats its stand on the protection of minority communities in Bangladesh. However, the State Department spokesperson also praised the efforts taken by Bangladesh in recent times.
“We condemn any example of violence or intolerance directed to members of minority communities in any country and have welcomed the measures taken by Bangladesh’s interim government to ensure safety and safety for all in Bangladesh. That is what we are looking for.
Tulsi visited Hawaii, Japan, Thailand, India and France on his first multi-nation visit as a director of Gabbard National Intelligence.