5 jets shot down during India-Pak conflict, claims Trump
In virtually rejecting Trump's claim of ending the conflict, New Delhi has been maintaining that the two sides halted their military actions following direct talks between their militaries without any mediation by the US.
PTI
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US President Donald Trump
New York/Washington, 19 July
In a fresh claim, US President Donald Trump said "five jets were
shot down" during the conflict between India and Pakistan in May and
repeated his assertion that the fighting ended following his intervention.
The US president did not specify whether the jets were lost by either of
the two countries or whether he was referring to combined losses by both sides.
In virtually rejecting Trump's claim of ending the conflict, New Delhi has been maintaining that the two sides halted their military actions following
direct talks between their militaries without any mediation by the US.
Speaking at the White House during a dinner he hosted for Republican
senators on Friday, Trump said: "You had India, Pakistan, that was going…
in fact, planes were being shot out of the air...four or five. But I think five
jets were shot down actually…that was getting worse and worse, wasn't it?
"That was looking like it was going to go, these are two serious
nuclear countries, and they were hitting each other," he said.
“But India and Pakistan were going at it, and they were back and forth,
and it was getting bigger and bigger. And we got it solved through trade. We
said ‘You guys want to make a trade deal. We're not making a trade deal if
you're going to be throwing around weapons and maybe nuclear weapons. Both very
powerful nuclear states,” Trump said.
He said his administration achieved more in six months than almost any
other administration could accomplish in eight years.
"Something I'm very proud of, we stopped a lot of wars, a lot of
wars. And these were serious wars,” Trump said.
Since 10 May, Trump has repeated his claim several times on various
occasions that he “helped settle” the tensions between India and Pakistan and
that he told the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbours that America will do a
“lot of trade” with them if they stopped the conflict.
India launched Operation Sindoor on 7 May, targeting terrorist
infrastructure in territories controlled by Pakistan in response to the Pahalgam terror attack.
The Resistance Front (TRF), a front for Pakistan-based terrorist group
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), had claimed responsibility.
The strikes triggered four days of intense clashes that ended with an
understanding on stopping the military actions on 10 May.
The US on Thursday designated The Resistance Front as a foreign terrorist organisation. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement that
the Department of State is adding The Resistance Front (TRF) as a designated
Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO) and Specially Designated Global Terrorist
(SDGT).
India welcomed the US decision to designate TRF as a designated FTO and
SDGT.
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