City
Epaper

Trump repeats false claim of having ended India-Pakistan conflict following Op Sindoor

By ANI | Updated: October 7, 2025 06:05 IST

Washington DC [US], October 7 : US President Donald Trump on Monday (local time) again claimed to have ended ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US], October 7 : US President Donald Trump on Monday (local time) again claimed to have ended India-Pakistan crisis following Operation Sindoor.

Trump again wrongly claimed he ended the conflict through the means of trade, even after the Ministry of External Affairs rejected his claims on several occasions.

"We're a rich country again, we're a powerful country because, you know, I've ended seven wars, at least half of them were because of my ability at trade and because of tariffs. If I didn't have the power of tariffs, you would have at least four of the seven wars raging... If you look at India and Pakistan, they were ready to go at it. Seven planes were shot down... I don't want to say exactly what I said, but what I said was very effective. Not only did we make hundreds of billions of dollars, but we're a peacekeeper because of tariffs," he said.

Then, turning to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's impending visit, said that he was visiting to talk about tariffs.

He said, "But so I think he's coming probably to talk about tariffs, because a lot of companies are leaving Canada to come into the US, and they're leaving Mexico, and by the way, they're leaving China, they're leaving all over the world to come into the US. Nobody's actually seen anything like it."

On September 21, Trump repeated his Indo-Pakistan conflict mediation claim, stating that he should be honoured with the Nobel Prize for "ending seven wars."

Speaking at the American Cornerstone Institute Founder's Dinner on Saturday, Trump said, "We are forging peace agreements, and we are stopping wars. So we stopped wars between India and Pakistan, Thailand and Cambodia."

"Think of India and Pakistan. Think of that. And you know how I stopped that with trade. They want to trade. And I have great respect for both leaders. But when you take a look at all of these wars that we've stopped," he added.

The US president also listed other conflicts he claimed to have influenced, including those in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kosovo and Serbia, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, Rwanda and the Congo.

"Just look at that. India, Pakistan, Thailand, Cambodia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kosovo and Serbia, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, Rwanda and the Congo. We stopped all of them. And 60 per cent of them were stopped because of trade," he said.

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

InternationalIndia’s 2047 vision rooted in policy: Vinay Kwatra

NationalOdisha: Ratna Bhandar outer treasury inventory complete; inner treasury work to begin April 13th

InternationalUS holds talks witrh Iran amid Trump's victory claims

NationalUnion Minister Piyush Goyal welcomes second batch of evacuated Indian Fishermen at Chennai Airport

NationalBJP Bengal files complaint over alleged appointment of election personnel by RO; urges ECI action

International Realted Stories

InternationalDespite differences, negotiations will continue: Iran-US talks in Islamabad extended by one day

InternationalEarthquake of magnitude 4.0 strikes Myanmar

InternationalIsrael seeks "a real peace agreement that will last for generations" with Lebanon: Netanyahu

International"We win regardless...": US President Donald Trump remarks on US-Iran talks in Islamabad

International'Fuel Pass' app crashes on debut in Dhaka; drivers face long queues and technical glitches