
New Delhi: Between April 22, and in mid -June, there was no communication between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump.
The notes follow the repeated statement of Trump that he has helped to convey a ceasefire between India and Pakistan – a claim that the new Delhi consistently rejects.
After April 22, a terrorist attack in Jammu and Kashmir India attacked Pakistan’s terrorist bases on May 7 under his operation Sindoor. The hostility continued until May 10, when a ceasefire was called.
Indian officials consistently claimed that the ceasefire was conveyed bilaterally.
In a cemented statement on Indian foreign policy in the ongoing Sindoor Jaishankar operation, he repeated Modi’s doctrine of zero tolerance against cross -border terrorism.
Jaishankar said at his address Lok Sabha that interviews and terror cannot go hand in hand and that India will not pay attention to the threats of nuclear weapons.
“Talking and terror cannot go together. Blood and water cannot flow together,” Jaishankar said.
Modi announced the Indian approach against terror at its address on Nation 12.
Jaishankar said the global fraternity stood up with India and its reaction to a terrorist attack in Pahalgam, where India attacked the key terrorist bases in Pakistan and Pakistan Kashmir.
He said that all except three nations together with Pakistan did not support India. Prime Minister Modi received about 20 telephone calls from world leaders expressing solidarity and supportive operation of the Sindoor, the Minister of External Affairs of Parliament said.
Seven Indian delegations of members of parliament across political parties helped to tell the Indian view of foreign government “against cross -border terrorism, Jaishankar said.
The Minister said the Sindoor operation was still ongoing, but did not provide further details.
Jaishankar also said that the UN Security Council has shown solidarity with India and condemned the Pahalgam attack, which left 26 people dead.
“Our objectives in the Security Council were two – one to obtain approval from the Security Council of the need for liability and two to put themselves in court, those who committed these attacks.”
The Declaration of the OSC, of 25 April, also stated that each nation has the right to defend against cross -border terrorism.
“And most importantly, the Council emphasized the need to keep the perpetrator, organizers, financiers and sponsors of this forgiven terrorist act and put them in court,” said Jaishankar.
“This statement resonated throughout the international community,” he added.
The Jaishankar address came to the notes of the Minister of Defense Rajnath Singh before on a day who said that the Indian armed forces were able to thwart all the attacks of Pakistan’s forces and managed to damage the key terrorist bases and military infrastructure.
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