President Donald Trump on Monday repeated his offer to mediate Pakistan’s dispute with India over territory in Kashmir, telling Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan that he has mediated a lot of big disputes among his friends with great success.

“I trust this gentleman right here. I do trust Pakistan. I have a lot of Pakistani friends living in New York, smart and great negotiators, by the way. They’re among the toughest negotiators in the world. If I can help, I can help,” the president said, noting that he was set to meet Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi again later this week.

“You have to have two parties that want to agree,” he continued. “When they come, and at some point India may come, I have a very good relationship with Prime Minister Modi. I have a very good relationship with Prime Minister Khan.

“And if at any time they say, you know, we have some points we think you can maybe iron out, I think I’d be an extremely good arbitrator,” he continued.

Muslim-majority Kashmir has long been a flashpoint between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, the reason for two of the three wars they’ve fought.

Trump said he could win a Nobel Peace Prize for the effort.

“I think I’m going to get a Nobel Prize for a lot of things, if they gave it out fairly, which they don’t,” Trump said. “They gave one to Obama immediately upon his ascent to the presidency, and he had no idea why he got it. And, you know what? That was the only thing I agreed with him on.

“But I don’t think you’ve ever had a president that felt the way I do in a positive way about Pakistan. People before me did not know what they were doing,” he said.