'Eight planes shot down'
Trump adds one more plane in his India-Pakistan ceasefire claim

US President Donald Trump has once again reiterated his old claim that India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire after his intervention.
Speaking at an event in Miami, Florida, on Wednesday, Trump added new details to his claims, saying that after his intervention, the next day he received a call claiming that they had made peace after he put out trade conditions.
Trump claimed he had solved eight wars in the nine months he had been in office and played a key role in bringing India and Pakistan to a truce. "You know, I was in the midst of a trade deal with both of them (India and Pakistan), and then I read on the front page of a certain newspaper... I heard they were going to war," media quoted Trump as saying, adding that a total of eight planes had been shot down during the military conflict.
His previous claim stood at seven.
"I said, this is war, and they are going at it. And they are two nuclear nations. I said, 'I'm not going to make any trade deals with you guys unless you agree to peace," Trump said, adding that his statement took both India and Pakistan by shock.
"The two nations said 'No way. This has nothing to do...' I said, 'It has everything to do. You are nuclear powers. I'm not trading with you. We're not making any deals with you if you're at war with each other'."
As per the claim made by Trump, this conversation with India and Pakistan took place on May 9. On May 10-2025, both countries announced they had come to a ceasefire understanding and would stop all fighting.
"A day later, I get a call saying, 'We made peace'. They stopped. I said, 'Thank you. Let's do trade'. Isn't that great? Tariffs did that... Without tariffs, that would have never happened," Trump said amid applause.
Trump's tariff announcement had imposed a 25 percent levy on India in response to what he described as "the highest tariffs on US goods" and a 19 percent tariff on Pakistan. He later added an extra 25 percent on India, taking the total to 50 percent, as a penalty for New Delhi's purchase of Russian oil and its participation in the BRICS bloc, which, according to Trump, fostered anti-American policies.


















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