City
Epaper

Trump, again, claims credit for ending India-Pak conflict

By IANS | Updated: May 21, 2025 23:32 IST

Washington, May 21 President Donald Trump on Wednesday claimed once again that he ended India-Pakistan hostilities, holding out ...

Open in App

Washington, May 21 President Donald Trump on Wednesday claimed once again that he ended India-Pakistan hostilities, holding out to the two countries the lure of trading with the US.

“I think I settled it through trade,” Trump said in a media interview in the White House with visiting South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, referring to the India-Pakistan hostilities. “We’re doing a big deal with India. We're doing a big deal with Pakistan …What are you guys doing? You know, somebody had to be the last one to shoot. But the shooting was getting worse and worse, bigger and bigger, deeper and deeper into the countries.”

Trump went on to say, “We spoke to them, and we, I think we, you know, I hate to say we got it settled, and then two days later, something happens, and they say it's Trump's fault. Pakistan has got some excellent people and some really good... great leaders, and India has my friend (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi. He's a great guy.”

President Trump and his administration have repeatedly claimed to end the hostilities between the two South Asian countries following the killing of tourists in Pahalgam by terrorists linked to the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba.

The US has been in touch with both sides, as have many other countries, which had called for both India and Pakistan to end the conflict.

India has said the conflict ended after a phone call from the Pakistani military.

But President Trump became the first to announce the end of fighting, saying the “ceasefire” had been mediated by the US. Secretary of State Marco Rubio went further and said the two sides have agreed “to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site”.

India has historically opposed third-party involvement in settling any of its disputes, insisting on dealing with them bilaterally. President Trump, however, has insisted on offering mediation to settle India’s issues with both Pakistan and China, to which India has both firmly and repeatedly turned down politely.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUkraine's NATO membership "key question" of discussion with US delegation: Kremlin aide

Cricket"Last few overs while batting cost the game": Irfan Pathan after India suffer four-wicket loss to South Africa

EntertainmentMartin Scorsese to team up with Brian Koppelman, David Levien for a series on Las Vegas casino business

Cricket"Batting at number four is a challenge for me": Ruturaj Gaikwad after scoring maiden ODI hundred

Cricket"You dream of moments like these": Ruturaj on his record-breaking partnership with Virat in Raipur ODI

International Realted Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar holds telephonic conversation with Omani counterpart Albusaidi, discusses deepening of bilateral cooperation

InternationalOperation Sagar Bandhu: Indian Air Force C-17 airlifts a 65-ton Bailey Bridge from Hindan to Colombo, relief assistance continues

InternationalEAM Jaishankar warns West will be "net losers" if skilled immigration is restricted

InternationalUAE allocates USD 15 million to UNHCR for Sudan response

InternationalUnion Minister Kiren Rijiju holds "warm, constructive" talks with Saudi Shura Council delegation