The president of the United States, Donald Trump, has said that Hey India and Pakistan “stops” what he described as actions of “Tit for Tat”, saying that if he can do something to “help”, he will be there.
Trump’s comments occurred after the Indian Army carried out attacks against terrorist objectives in Kashmir occupied by Pakistan (Pok) and the Punjab province of Pakistan on Wednesday. The Pakistan army carried out one of the most intense artillery and mortar bombings in years aimed at the villages forward along the LOC in Jammu and Kashmir.
“Oh, it’s so terrible. My position is that I get along with both.
“Good relations with both of them and I want to see to stop. And if I can do something to help, I will be there,” Trump said in response to a question about the “war” between India and Pakistan.
It was a speaking on Wednesday at the Oval office after the swear ceremony or David Peredue as ambassador of the United States in China.
Previously, Hour after the Indian strikes, Trump had said that India and Pakistan have been fighting for a long time and people knew that “something was going to happen.”
“It’s a shame, we listened just when we were walking through the oval doors (office). I just heard it. I think people knew that something was going to happen a bit of the past. They have fought on the legs for a long time.
“They have been fighting for many, many decades and centuries, in reality, if you really think about it,” Trump said when asked about the attacks between India and Pakistan.
When asked if he has any message for the two countries, he said: “No, I just hope it ends very quickly.” Meanwhile, a superior American military commander has said that the United States is “observing the situation very closely” after Indian military attacks.
“At this time it is too early to comment on any of that Wednesday.
India launched the Sindoor operation at dawn on Wednesday reaching nine terrorist objectives in Kashmir (Pok) and Punjab of Pakistan and the Punjab province of Pakistan in retaliation for the terrorist attack of April 22 that killed 26 people in the Pahalgama Jammu and Kashmir.
Pakistan’s army spokesman, Lieutenant General Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry, said 31 people died and another 57 wounds in Indian missile strikes released shortly after midnight.
Separately, at least 13 people, including four children and a soldier, were killed and before 57 while the Pakistan army carried out one of the most intense artillery and mortar bombings in years that go forward to the Indians failed in Estierras in Jammu and Cashmira.
Posted on May 8, 2025