Trump Calls India–Pakistan Tensions ‘a Shame,’ Says He Hopes for a Quick End

Secretary of State Marco Rubio says top administration officials are speaking with both sides and urging de-escalation.

President Donald Trump on May 6 responded to rising tensions between India and Pakistan after India launched airstrikes, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio said officials are speaking with both sides.

Pakistan is responding militarily to India’s airstrikes, which followed a terrorist attack that killed 26 people on April 22 in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir, a Himalayan region bordering Pakistan, India, and China.

All three nations control parts of it, and India and Pakistan both claim full sovereignty over it.

During an exchange with reporters in the White House on Tuesday evening, Trump said that the escalating incident between the two nuclear-armed states is “a shame,” adding, “We just heard about it.”

“I guess people knew something was going to happen based on a little bit of the past. They’ve been fighting for a long time.” Trump said. “I just hope it ends very quickly.”

Rubio wrote on social media platform X on Tuesday that he was monitoring the situation closely, adding that Washington would continue to engage with both sides to forge a resolution.

The Trump administration’s top national security advisers have spoken to top officials of both India and Pakistan following the military strikes, he said.

“I am monitoring the situation between India and Pakistan closely. I echo [the president’s] comments earlier today that this hopefully ends quickly and will continue to engage both Indian and Pakistani leadership towards a peaceful resolution,” Rubio wrote, adding that he wants both states to “keep lines of communication open and avoid escalation.”

In a statement posted online, India’s government said it struck infrastructure used by Pakistani groups that were linked to last month’s terrorist attack. The region has been the subject of decades-long tensions between the two nations.

“Our actions have been focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature. No Pakistani military facilities have been targeted. India has demonstrated considerable restraint in selection of targets and method of execution,” the Indian government said in its statement on Tuesday.

Khawaja Muhammad Asif, the Pakistani minister of defense, told Bloomberg News on Tuesday night that Pakistan has downed five Indian planes. At least seven civilians were killed in the region by Pakistani shelling, Indian police and medics said.

Meanwhile, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told Parliament that Pakistan’s air force had been on high alert, charging that India falsely tried to implicate Pakistan in the April 22 attack on tourists. He said that though he offered an international probe into the attack, New Delhi did not respond to the proposal.

Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement, described the Indian strikes as an “act of war” and “blatant aggression.”

“The situation continues to evolve,” it said. Without elaborating, the ministry said that “Pakistan reserves the right to respond appropriately at a time and place of its choosing” under international law and the United Nations charter.

Tensions have soared between the nuclear-armed neighbors since the April terrorist attack, for which India has blamed Pakistan, an allegation that Islamabad says is false.

India is considered an important U.S. partner for Washington, while Pakistan remains an ally despite its diminished importance after the U.S. military withdrew from neighboring Afghanistan in 2021.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Original News Source Link – Epoch Times

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