India in denial, rejects Trump's claim of brokering ceasefire with Pakistan

The issue of trade did not come up,” says Indian FM spokesperson on recent talks between US and Indian leaders

Indian foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal. Photo: Screengrab

When US President Donald Trump took the stage this week to declare that his administration had brokered a ceasefire between India and Pakistan, his remarks quickly triggered a diplomatic disconnect — especially after he credited trade incentives for securing the truce.

“Just days ago, my administration successfully brokered a historic ceasefire to stop the escalating violence between India and Pakistan,” he said, pausing for applause. “And I used trade to a large extent to do it. I said, ‘Fellas, c’mon. Let’s make a deal. Let’s not trade nuclear missiles — let’s trade the things that you make so beautifully.’”

To Trump, the story was simple: two nuclear-armed rivals, one American president, and a deal sealed with commerce, charisma, and the diplomatic equivalent of a wink. “They both have very powerful leaders, very strong leaders, good leaders, smart leaders,” he added. “It all stopped.”

For Washington, the ceasefire was a diplomatic win — one wrapped in campaign trail theatrics and Marco Rubio shoutouts. “Marco, stand up,” Trump said mid-speech. “What a great job you did on that. Maybe we can get them together for a nice dinner. Wouldn’t that be nice?”

But in India, the script read differently. No mention of Trump. No trade angle. No thanks. Instead, Indian officials reiterated that the ceasefire — which came after days of missile exchanges, drone strikes, and breathless TV coverage — was a direct, bilateral understanding with Pakistan. If the US played a role, India’s version suggests, it was merely peripheral.

And on Tuesday, New Delhi made that denial official.

At a weekly press conference, Indian foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal stated, “The issue of trade did not come up in any of these discussions,” referring to conversations between US Vice President JD Vance and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and between Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Foreign Minister S Jaishankar.

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