
Ceasefire had no linkage with U.S. trade: Jaishankar in Parliament
In a clear rebuttal of the repeated assertions by U.S. President Donald Trump that he stopped the recent India-Pakistan conflict, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar on Monday (July 28, 2025) told the Lok Sabha that there was no phone call between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Mr. Trump during the tense phase with Pakistan after the April 22 terrorist attack in Pahalgam.
MEA S. Jaishankar denies involvement of U.S. President Donald Trump in India-Pakistan ceasefire
Mr. Trump has said on multiple occasions that he extracted a ceasefire from India and Pakistan by threatening to cut off trade if they continued fighting.
'Sindoor an answer'
Speaking in the Lok Sabha on the Operation Sindoor launched against terror bases in Pakistan in retaliation for the Pahalgam attack, he said the operation ensured that terrorists will no longer be treated as proxies. The military operation created a 'new normal' by conveying that cross-border attacks from Pakistan will draw an 'appropriate response', he said.
'I want to make two things clear – one, at no stage in any conversation with the United States, was there any linkage with trade and what was going on. Secondly, there was no call between the Prime Minister and President Trump from the 22nd of April – when President Trump called up to convey his sympathy – and 17th of June when he called up the PM in Canada to explain why he could not meet him,' said Mr. Jaishankar during the debate on Operation Sindoor.
Opposition intervenes
Mr. Jaishankar defended the multi-party delegations that were sent out to a number of countries to convey India's position on cross-border terror and to present the government's arguments on Operation Sindoor, even as the Opposition tried to corner the government on the repeated assertions by Mr. Trump. The Opposition's loud intervention prompted Home Minister Amit Shah to remark that they should hear out the External Affairs Minister first. 'India's External Affairs Minister who has taken the oath of office is making a statement here and they [Opposition] do not want to trust him but they have faith in some other country.'
Also Read: Parliament Monsoon session LIVE Day 6 | July 28, 2025
It was on May 10, 2025, that Mr. Trump took to social media platform TruthSocial to announce a pause in the fighting between India and Pakistan, shortly before Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri announced the ceasefire before the media here. Mr. Trump praised Vice-President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio for 'bringing the ceasefire into effect'. Thereafter, he has mentioned several times that his intervention brought about the ceasefire.
On July 22, Mr. Trump repeated that he stopped the brief war between India and Pakistan that started on the morning of May 7, adding that five aircraft were shot down during the conflict though he did not clarify who owned those aircraft. 'They shot down five planes and it was back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. I called them and said, 'Listen, no more trade. If you do this, you're not going to be good…They're both powerful nuclear nations and that would have happened'.
Mr. Jaishankar said the Operation Sindoor had brought in a 'new normal' in the relations with Pakistan. All issues with Pakistan will be settled through bilateral means, he said and ruled out the role of a third party. 'The challenge of cross-border terrorism continues but Operation Sindoor marks a new phase. There is now a new normal. The new normal has five points – one, terrorists will not be treated as proxies; two, cross-border terrorism will get an appropriate response; three. terror and talks are not possible together – there will only be talks on terror; four, not yielding to nuclear blackmail, and finally, terror and good neighbourliness cannot co-exist, blood and water cannot flow together. This is our position,' said Mr. Jaishankar presenting the government's policy on Pakistan and cross-border terrorism following Operation Sindoor.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi called Mr. Jaishankar's speech 'outstanding'. 'He highlighted how the world has clearly heard India's perspective on fighting the menace of terrorism through Operation Sindoor,' Mr. Modi wrote on X.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
12 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Trump's tariff tsunami hits more foreign shores
Synopsis The presidential order listed higher import duty rates of 10% to 41% starting in a week's time for 69 trading partners, taking the U.S. effective tariff rate to about 18%, from 2.3% last year, according to analysts at Capital Economics. Trump's new tariffs have created yet more uncertainty, with many details unclear. They are set to take effect on Aug 7 at 0401 GMT, a White House official said. Reuters WASHINGTON: U.S. President Donald Trump's latest wave of tariffs on exports from dozens of trading partners sent global stock markets tumbling on Friday and countries and companies scrambling to seek ways to strike better Trump presses ahead with plans to reorder the global economy with the highest tariff rates since the early 1930s, Switzerland, "stunned" by 39% tariffs, sought more tariffs also include a 35% duty on many goods from Canada, 50% for Brazil, 20% for Taiwan. Taiwan said its rate was "temporary" and it expected to reach a lower figure. The presidential order listed higher import duty rates of 10% to 41% starting in a week's time for 69 trading partners, taking the U.S. effective tariff rate to about 18%, from 2.3% last year, according to analysts at Capital Economics. Trump's new tariffs have created yet more uncertainty, with many details unclear. They are set to take effect on Aug 7 at 0401 GMT, a White House official said. The European Union, which struck a framework deal with Trump on Sunday, is still awaiting more Trump orders to deliver on agreed carve-outs, including on cars and aircraft, EU officials said, saying the latest executive orders did not cover it is unclear how the administration intends to define and police the transshipment restrictions, which threaten 40% levies on any exporter deemed to have tried to mask goods from a higher-tariffed originator, such as China, as their own product. The new tariffs will kick in at what has become a perilous moment for the U.S. economy, with U.S. data on Friday showing employment growth was weaker than thought tariff rollout also comes amid evidence they have begun driving up prices. U.S. Commerce Department data released Thursday showed prices for home furnishings and durable household equipment jumped 1.3% in June, the biggest gain since March 2022. NO WINNERS? Countries hit with hefty tariffs said they will seek to negotiate with the U.S. in hopes of getting a lower said it would push for a "negotiated solution" with the U.S."It's a massive shock for the export industry and for the whole country. We are really stunned," said Jean-Philippe Kohl, deputy director of Swissmem, representing Switzerland's mechanical and electrical engineering Africa's Trade Minister Parks Tau said he was seeking "real, practical interventions" to defend jobs and the economy against the 30% U.S. tariff it Asian countries, however, breathed a sigh of relief after the U.S. tariffs on their exports that were lower than threatened and levelled the playing field with a rate of about 19% across the region's biggest economies.


India Today
14 minutes ago
- India Today
Trump eyes bringing Azerbaijan, Central Asian nations into Abraham Accords: Repot
President Donald Trump's administration is actively discussing with Azerbaijan the possibility of bringing that nation and some Central Asian allies into the Abraham Accords, hoping to deepen their existing ties with Israel, according to five sources with knowledge of the part of the Abraham Accords, inked in 2020 and 2021 during Trump's first term in office, four Muslim-majority countries agreed to normalise diplomatic relations with Israel after US and every country in Central Asia, by contrast, already have longstanding relations with Israel, meaning that an expansion of the accords to include them would largely be symbolic, focusing on strengthening ties in areas like trade and military cooperation, said the sources, who requested anonymity to discuss private conversations. Such an expansion would reflect Trump's openness to pacts that are less ambitious than his administration's goal to convince regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia to restore ties with Israel while war rages in kingdom has repeatedly said it would not recognise Israel without steps towards Israeli recognition of a Palestinian state. A soaring death toll in Gaza and starvation in the enclave due to blockage of aid and military operations by Israel have buoyed Arab fury, complicating efforts to add more Muslim-majority countries to the Abraham war in Gaza, where over 60,000 people including tens of thousands of women and children have died according to local health authorities, has provoked global anger. Canada, France and the United Kingdom have announced plans in recent days to recognise an independent key sticking point is Azerbaijan's conflict with its neighbour Armenia, since the Trump administration considers a peace deal between the two Caucasus nations as a precondition to join the Abraham Accords, three sources Trump officials have publicly floated several potential entrants into the accords, the talks centered on Azerbaijan are among the most structured and serious, the sources said. Two of the sources argued a deal could be reached within months or even special envoy for peace missions, Steve Witkoff, travelled to Azerbaijan's capital, Baku, in March to meet with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. Aryeh Lightstone, a key Witkoff aide, met Aliyev later in the spring in part to discuss the Abraham Accords, three of the sources part of the discussions, Azerbaijani officials have contacted officials in Central Asian nations, including in nearby Kazakhstan, to gauge their interest in a broader Abraham Accords expansion, those sources said. It was not clear which other countries in Central Asia - which includes Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan - were State Department, asked for comment, did not discuss specific countries, but said expanding the accords has been one of the key objectives of Trump. "We are working to get more countries to join," said a US Azerbaijani government declined to White House, the Israeli foreign ministry and the Kazakhstani embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for new accords would not modify the previous Abraham Accords deals signed by REMAINThe original Abraham Accords - inked between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan - were centered on restoration of ties. The second round of expansion appears to be morphing into a broader mechanism designed to expand US and Israeli soft between Russia to the north and Iran to the south, Azerbaijan occupies a critical link in trade flows between Central Asia and the West. The Caucasus and Central Asia are also rich in natural resources, including oil and gas, prompting various major powers to compete for influence in the the accords to nations that already have diplomatic relations with Israel may also be a means of delivering symbolic wins to a president who is known to talk up even relatively small sources described the discussions involving Central Asia as embryonic - but the discussions with Azerbaijan as relatively challenges remain and there is no guarantee a deal will be reached, particularly with slow progress in talks between Armenia and two countries, which both won independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, have been at loggerheads since the late 1980s when Nagorno-Karabakh - an Azerbaijani region that had a mostly ethnic-Armenian population - broke away from Azerbaijan with support from 2023, Azerbaijan retook Karabakh, prompting about 100,000 ethnic Armenians to flee to Armenia. Both sides have since said they want to sign a treaty on a formal end to the Christian Armenia and the US have close ties, and the Trump administration is wary of taking action that could upset authorities in US officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trump himself, have argued that a peace deal between those two nations is near."Armenia and Azerbaijan, we worked magic there," Trump told reporters earlier in July. "And it's pretty close."- EndsMust Watch


Time of India
14 minutes ago
- Time of India
'Stop enabling Russia...': US accuses China of supporting Moscow's military at UN Security Council
U.S. President Donald Trump has made clear that he wants a deal to end Russia's war in Ukraine by August 8, the United States told the United Nations Security Council on Thursday (July 31). 'Both Russia and Ukraine must negotiate a ceasefire and a durable peace. It is time to make a deal. President Trump has made clear that this must be done by August 8. The United States is prepared to implement additional measures to secure peace,' senior U.S. diplomat John Kelley told the 15-member council. Russia, which denies deliberately targeting civilians in the war, has stepped up air strikes on Ukrainian towns and cities far from the front lines of the war, situated in the east and south, in recent months. Thousands of civilians, the vast majority of them Ukrainian, have been killed since Moscow invaded in 2022. Show more Show less