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India politely rejects Trump's offer to mediate as tensions escalate with PakistanDuring Trump’s first tenure in the Oval Office, New Delhi had rejected his offer to mediate between India and China. He had made the offer after the violent face-off between the soldiers of the Indian Army and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army at Galwan Valley on June 15, 2020.
Anirban Bhaumik
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>Narendra Modi during a meeting with Donald Trump</p></div>

Narendra Modi during a meeting with Donald Trump

Credit: PTI Photo

New Delhi: India has thanked United States President Donald Trump but politely rejected his offer to help diffuse tension with Pakistan. New Delhi instead urged the Trump Administration in Washington DC, to ask Islamabad to stop supporting terrorist organisations.

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“We are truly, truly thankful to President Trump. I think the best would be if our partners in the US would tell the Pakistanis to stop supporting these terrorists,” Vinay Mohan Kwatra, New Delhi’s envoy to Washington, D.C., told Fox News. He made the comment after Trump offered to help de-escalate tension between India and Pakistan.

During Trump’s first tenure in the Oval Office, New Delhi had rejected his offer to mediate between India and China. He had made the offer after the violent face-off between the soldiers of the Indian Army and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army at Galwan Valley on June 15, 2020.

India carried out missile strikes early on Wednesday, targeting the terrorist camps in Pakistan as well as in parts of India’s Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir illegally occupied by Pakistan. The ‘Operation Sindoor’ was launched a fortnight after 26 people were killed by a gang of Pakistani and Pakistan-trained terrorists at Baisaran near Pahalgam in J&K on April 22.

“This operation that we carried out was aimed at bringing accountability and justice to those subhuman monsters, those worst of the worst, who carried out these terrible attacks on the 22nd of April,” Kwatra told the TV channel.

As India’s missile strikes on terrorist camps in areas under the control of Pakistan heightened tensions between the two South Asian nations, the Trump Administration urged New Delhi and Washington, D.C., to avoid escalation.

“It is so terrible. I get along with both. I know both very well. I want to see them work it out; I want to see them stop. Hopefully, they can stop now. They have done tit for tat,” Trump said, adding that the US had good relationships with both India and Pakistan.

New Delhi in the past rejected any attempt by any foreign leader or entity or any international organisation to mediate between India and Pakistan.

New Delhi maintains that the 1972 Simla Agreement between India and Pakistan and the 1999 Lahore Declaration had left no scope for the UN or any other third party to play any role in resolving the “outstanding issues” between the two South Asian neighbours.

Islamabad, however, recently put in abeyance the Simla Agreement and all other bilateral pacts between India and Pakistan as a retaliatory measure after New Delhi suspended the Indus Water Treaty, 1960, in response to the terrorist attack.

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(Published 08 May 2025, 19:26 IST)