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Trump redeels the 'n word' for Fox News

    President Donald Trump discussed a certain “n-word”-this means on Friday “nuclear”-in a FOX news interview.

    The president went back to that part of him while discussing the recent ceasefire between India and Pakistan-two nuclear arming countries-with Special report Anchor Bret Baier.

    After Baier had framed the Stakes – the Fires of 10 May – of which Trump said it was mediated by the US – as a “foreign policy success,” the president described the escalating issue with a strange choice of words.

    “They were angry and the next phase was probably you see where it got? It was tit-for-tat. It became deeper and more, I mean, more rockets. Everyone was stronger, stronger, to a point where the next will be, you know what: the N-word,” Trump said.

    “You know what the N word is, right?” He asked Baier, who replied: “Nuclear.”

    Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi / Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi / Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    “Yes,” Trump confirmed, while the two chuckled over it.

    “Thanks for the clarification,” said Baier.

    “I thought you would like to clean it up,” Trump continued, accused by his niece, his cousin and a producer on The student From using the racial blemish.

    “No, it's the N word. It is a very filthy word, right? In many ways. The N word used in a nuclear sense-That is the worst that can happen,” he said.

    Trump with baier and fox -anchor Martha Maccallum / Leah Millis / Reuters

    Trump with baier and fox -anchor Martha Maccallum / Leah Millis / Reuters

    The mediator rolling of the Trump government in the conflict was reportedly partially fueled by what Vice President JD Vance had said on Fox: that what happened between the two countries was “fundamentally none of our business”.

    That caused an alarm in the administration that things could get out of hand if the US was on the sidelines, The New York Times reported.

    And so VANCE and State Secretary Marco Rubio insisted on top officials in both countries the next day to end the fighting.

    The hostilities between neighboring countries were killed 26 civilians after a terrorist attack in April in the Indian -controlled Kashmir. India blamed Pakistan, who denied involvement.