Cong asks PM to break silence as Trump repeats India-Pak ceasefire claim 13 times
'@narendramodi when will you speak up,' the Congress leader Jairam Ramesh asked in the post.
PTI
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Congress general secretary in-charge communications Jairam Ramesh (PTI)
New Delhi, 14 June
The Congress on
Saturday cited that on 13 occasions, US President Donald Trump has publicly
"trumpeted" that he brought about a "ceasefire" between
India and Pakistan, and asked when will Prime Minister Narendra Modi speak up
on these claims.
"Today President
Trump turns 79. In the 34 days between 10 May, 2025, and 13 June , 2025, he
trumpeted publicly on 13 different occasions in 3 different countries that he
had brought about a ceasefire between India and Pakistan using trade with
America as a carrot and stick,” Congress general secretary in-charge
communications, Jairam Ramesh, said on X.
“He (Trump), of
course, showered praise on both countries in equal measure,” Ramesh said.
"@narendramodi
when will you speak up," the Congress leader asked in the post.
Ramesh also shared on
X a list and details of the occasions when Trump made the claims with the
quotes of the US president and links to media reports.
With Trump repeating
his claim that he "stopped a war between India and Pakistan", Ramesh
on Friday said the US president continues to make his claims for the "nth
time" but Prime Minister Modi continues to be silent on them.
Ramesh also shared a
video clip of Trump's remarks on X, in which he repeated his claim that he
"stopped a war between India and Pakistan" and stopped it "with
trade".
Ramesh said that as
India is engulfed in grief over the Ahmedabad aircraft tragedy, President Trump
continues to make his claims on India and Pakistan for the "nth
time".
"This was at the
Kennedy Centre in Washington DC yesterday. And the Prime Minister continues to
be silent on these claims," the Congress leader said on X.
Tensions between
India and Pakistan escalated after the 22 April Pahalgam terror attack, with
India carrying out precision strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir in the early hours of 7 May.
The on-ground
hostilities ended with an understanding of halting military actions following
talks between the director generals of military operations (DGMOs) of both
sides on 10 May.
Trump has been repeatedly claiming that the US stopped India and Pakistan from fighting.
However, India has
been consistently maintaining that the understanding on cessation of
hostilities with Pakistan was reached following direct talks between the DGMOs
of the two militaries.
Earlier this week, the
Congress claimed India has suffered three "huge diplomatic setbacks"
from the US, which is constantly hyphenating India and Pakistan and that the
Modi government's foreign policy has "failed" as it is driven by
domestic political considerations.
Ramesh said the US'
recent statements were both a "challenge and a warning" and required
serious thinking "when the prime minister is only interested in playing
divisive politics".
He also said Modi
should leave aside his "stubbornness" to call an all-party meeting
and a special session of Parliament.
Ramesh said US Army
General Michael Kurilla calling Pakistan a "phenomenal partner" in
the counterterrorism world, Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff General Asim Munir's
reported visit to Washington for the US Army Day celebrations later this week,
and the recent remarks by a Trump administration spokesperson were "three
huge setbacks" to India.
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