The Congress said on Saturday after US President Donald Trump made arbitration claims once again that Prime Minister Narendra Modi should now give a clear answer within Parliament about this. Party General Secretary Jairam Ramesh has demanded this after a new statement by Trump.
According to reports, Trump has said, “We stopped many wars. What was happening between India and Pakistan was serious. The aircraft were being dropped in the air. I believe that five fighter aircraft were actually killed.”
He also said, “India and Pakistan were face to face and it was increasing, we solved it through business. We said, do you want to make a business agreement? We will not compromise if you are using weapons and perhaps nuclear weapons. Both are very powerful atomic countries. ”
Congress leader Ramesh posted on ‘X’ and said that “Trump missile” has been fired for the 24th time just two days before the monsoon session of Parliament and there are two messages in it. He said that Trump again said that the US stopped the war between India and Pakistan.
According to Ramesh, the US President also reiterated that it was said on his behalf that if “the war continues then there will be no business agreement.”
Ramesh said that Trump said that if India and Pakistan want a trade agreement with America, they would have to agree to the ceasefire immediately. He said, “President Trump’s sensational new revelation is that five fighter jets seem to be dropped.”
The Congress leader took a sarcasm, “The Prime Minister, who has been with years of friendship with President Trump and ‘Haglomacy’ (diplomacy of hugs), which is with ‘Houdi Modi’ (September 2019) and ‘Namaste Trump’ (February 2020), he should now give clear and concrete statements in Parliament himself in Parliament.
US President Trump has several times claimed that he stopped the military struggle between India and Pakistan through a trade agreement. India, on the other hand, says that after contacting the Director General of Military Operations of Pakistan (DGMO), it was considered to stop military action.