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Trump once again claims credit for brokering truce in India-Pakan conflict, says ‘we did that through trade’ | World News

US President Donald Trump once again reiterated his claim of brokering a peace deal between India and Pakan, stating that his mediation averted a potential war between the two countries.During his meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Monday (July 14), Trump said, “We’ve been very successful in settling wars. You have India and Pakan. You have Rwanda and the Congo, that was going on for 30 years. India, the way, Pakan would have been a nuclear war within another week, the way that was going. That was going very badly.”
He emphasised that he leveraged trade to stop the conflict from escalating and warned both countries that he would not engage in trade deals if they continued to fight.

#WATCH | US President Donald Trump says, “We have been very successful in settling wars. You have India, Pakan…India and Pakan would have been a nuclear war within another week, the way that was going. That was going very badly. We did that through trade. I said, we’re… pic.twitter.com/GPDA6ObK0B
— ANI (@ANI) July 15, 2025
“We did that through trade. I said, we’re not going to talk to you about trade unless you get this thing settled. And they did, they are both great leaders.”
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The US president has repeatedly claimed credit for brokering a ceasefire in the 4-day India-Pakan conflict, despite Prime Miner Narendra Modi telling Trump that India neither requested the United States’ mediation nor discussed any trade deal.
The most recent instance was during Israeli Prime Miner Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to Washington, after he nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Trump had then told the reporters that his adminration’s diplomatic efforts helped stop the military conflict between India and Pakan.
“We stopped a lot of fights, very, very big one was India and Pakan. We stopped that over trade,” Trump said.Story continues below this ad
“We are dealing with India and Pakan. We said that we are not going to be dealing with you at all if you are gonna fight. They were maybe at a nuclear stage… Stopping that was really important,” he added.
Modi reminds Trump no US role in Operation Sindoor pause
After the US president left the G7 Summit in Canada early, cutting short a planned in-person meeting, PM Modi spoke to him via a phone call and told him that at no point was there any discussion, at any level, on an India-US trade deal or any proposal for mediation the US between India and Pakan.
Detailing the 35-minute phone conversation between PM Modi and Trump, their first since Operation Sindoor, Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said, “President Trump enquired if Prime Miner Modi could stop over in the US on his way back from Canada. Due to prior commitments, Prime Miner Modi expressed his inability to do so. Both leaders agreed to make efforts to meet in the near future.”Story continues below this ad
Underlining that a discussion on ending military action took place “directly between India and Pakan through the exing channels of communication between the two armed forces” and had been initiated “at Pakan’s request”, Modi said, “India does not and will never accept mediation.” He also said there was “complete political consensus” in India on this issue.
“Prime Miner Modi clearly conveyed to President Trump that at no point during this entire sequence of events was there any discussion, at any level, on an India-US trade deal, or any proposal for a mediation the US between India and Pakan. The discussion to cease military action took place directly between India and Pakan through the exing channels of communication between the two armed forces, and it was initiated at Pakan’s request. Prime Miner Modi firmly stated that India does not and will never accept mediation. There is complete political consensus in India on this matter,” Misri said.
(With inputs from agencies)

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