‘When will PM Modi break his silence?’ Congress on Trump’s truce claims

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Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh | Photo Credit: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar

The Congress on Saturday (May 31, 2025) wondered when Prime Minister Narendra Modi would respond to U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly given more than an indication that it was he who brokered a truce between India and Pakistan during the latest armed conflict.

In a series of posts on X, Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh tagged a video clip of Mr. Trump to say this is the 11th time in 21 days that Mr. Modi's "great friend" claimed he had a role to play in the ceasefire between the two neighbours.

This is 11th time in 21 days that PM @narendramodi's great friend and American President Donald Trump has made claims about how the ceasefire with Pakistan took place. When will the PM speak up? https://t.co/w1zPvReTWR

— Jairam Ramesh (@Jairam_Ramesh) May 31, 2025

"When will the PM speak up?" he asked.

Mr. Ramesh earlier said, "This is the 9th time in 20 days, across 3 countries and 3 cities. Donaldbhai keeps repeating the same sequence of events of how he got the 4-Day India-Pakistan war to stop - US intervention and the use of the trade instrument to stop nuclear escalation. The equivalence of India and Pakistan gets reiterated yet again." Mr. Trump's Commerce Secretary made exactly the same claims in his submission to the New York-based Court of International Trade on May 23, the Congress leader said.

"But Donaldbhai's friend Mr. Narendra Modi continues to ignore his claims with absolute silence. Why doesn't the PM speak up? "Is President Trump also doing what Mr. Modi does all the time and so well (i.e., lying)? Or is he speaking even 50% truth?" Mr. Ramesh said.

The Congress has been urging the government to clarify Mr. Trump's claims and object to his hyphenation of India and Pakistan.

The government has maintained that issues between India and Pakistan will be resolved bilaterally and without any third-party intervention.

Published - May 31, 2025 10:29 am IST

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