City
Epaper

US lawmakers backs Indian strikes, urge Pak to restore democracy

By IANS | Updated: May 7, 2025 21:37 IST

Washington, May 7 One Indian-descent US lawmaker on Wednesday called for Pakistan to not use the current tensions ...

Open in App

Washington, May 7 One Indian-descent US lawmaker on Wednesday called for Pakistan to not use the current tensions with India as pretext to further undermine democracy while another offered full-throated support and endorsement of India’s retaliatory strikes done earlier in the day, India time.

"In the wake of last month's horrific terrorist attack in Pahalgam, the need to combat terrorism and prevent future violence has become even more urgent. As Secretary Rubio stated, it is essential to avoid broader conflict and further escalation," Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is of Indian descent, said, adding, "At the same time, Pakistan must release former Prime Minister Imran Khan and ensure free and fair elections that uphold democratic values and give voice to the will of the Pakistani people. The current situation should not be used as a pretext to further undermine democracy in Pakistan.”

Meanwhile, Shri Thanedar, the second Indian-descent lawmaker, said, “Terrorism cannot be tolerated, and it cannot go unanswered. India has the right to defend its people, and I stand firmly with our ally in its efforts to dismantle these extremist networks."

He further said: “The United States should always stand with our allies against terrorism. This is a time for deeper US-India cooperation to confront shared threats, protect innocent lives, and defend the principles of democracy, human rights, and religious freedom."

Both Krishnamoorthi and Thanedar are members of the Democratic party and hail from Illinois and Michigan states respectively. There are two out five members of the House of Representatives of Indian descent, together called the Samosa Caucus — the other three are Ami Bera, Ro Khanna and Pramila Jayapal.

Krishnamoorthi, who on Wednesday announced he is running for US senate, was referring to Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s statement on Tuesday. “I am monitoring the situation between India and Pakistan closely,” Rubio had said. “I echo POTUS's comments earlier today that this hopefully ends quickly and will continue to engage both Indian and Pakistani leadership towards a peaceful resolution."

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

InternationalINS Savitri arrives in Seychelles to boost maritime cooperation, joint EEZ surveillance

NationalACB-EOW raids rock Chhattisgarh in multi-crore DMF, excise scam probe

CricketIND vs SA, 2nd Test: Muthusamy-Verreyne add to India's frustrations with a wicketless session (Day 2, Tea)

MumbaiMumbai-Pune Expressway Accident: High-Speed Crash Claims Two Lives, Four Hospitalised Near Kamshet

InternationalHolds talks with Ukrainian FM, reaffirms India's support for early end to conflict and enduring peace: Jaishankar

International Realted Stories

InternationalCOP30 ends with finance boost but no fossil fuel roadmap

InternationalHouthi court sentences 18 Yemeni UN aid workers to death for 'spying for Israel'

InternationalFormer Brazilian President Bolsonaro arrested for preventive custody

InternationalNumber of Koreans aboard 1945 sunken Japanese ship likely to be unveiled by year-end

InternationalDeath toll from Vietnam flooding climbs to 90