In a series of high -level meetings with members of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives, the President of the Popular Party of Pakistan (PPP) and the former Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari warned against the increasingly aggressive position in India, warning that it could destabilize the entire region of the south of Asia.
Leading a multi -party Pakistani delegation to Washington, Bilawal urged US legislators to support the “Mission of Peace” of Pakistan and facilitate significant dialogue to avoid the escalation of hostilities among neighbors with nuclear weapons.
During the discussions with several key legislators from the United States, including congressmen Jack Bergman, Tom Suozzi, Ryan Zinke, Maxine Waters, Al Green, Jonathan Jackson, Hank Johnson, Stacey Plaskett, Brian Mast, Brad Sherman, Gregory Meeks, Henry Cuellar and Senator Tom Cotton, ascended to the Concerns about the regional situation of Kashmir, and the situation of India and India and the situation of the region, and the situation of the region, and the situation of India, and the situation of India and India, and the situation of India, and the situation of the region, and the situation of the region, and the situation of the region, and the situation of India and India, and the situation of India and India. Provocations.
He had a frank and noun exchange with the senator @Tomcottonar On peace and security in southern Asia. I appreciate the role of the United States, especially president @realdonaldtrumpby facilitating the understanding of high fire as a trampoline for lasting peace. The Escalador of India highlighted … pic.twitter.com/ezzbgoqcc
– Bilawalbhuttozardari (@bbhutTozardari) June 5, 2025
A key point of concern was the unilateral suspension of India of the Treaty of the Water of the Indo, which Bilawal described a “violation of international law.”
“India is establishing a dangerous precedent of using water resources as a weapon,” he told legislators. “The suggestion of closing water for 240 million Pakistani is an existential threat. If India takes this step, it will be equivalent to a declaration of war.”
While recognizing the “positive role of the United States in reducing tensions between Pakistan and India” after the recent military confrontation, the president of PPP stressed that the high fire was only “only a beginning.”
“South Asia, India and Pakistan, and indirectly everyone, are more insecure today than when this crisis began,” he said. “The large -scale war threshold between Pakistan and India has never been so low in our history.”
He warned about an established dangerous precedent, where “any terrorism incident anywhere in India, whether proven or not, is considered to mean war.”
Underlining the urgency of the matter, Bilawal informed US legislators that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had ordered the delegation with a “peace mission.”
“This mission aims to find solutions to problems through dialogue and diplomacy with India,” he said. “We urge US legislators to continue their efforts to establish peace and stability in southern Asia and to rely on this peace mission.”
“If the United States puts its strength behind peace, you can convince India to solve our problems is the right thing to,” he said, and added, “a solution to the problem of Kashmir is of interest to all of us.”
The former Foreign Minister asked the United States to “facilitate significant and constructive dialogue between Pakistan and India” and “avoid that India seeks political to destabilize the region and the world.”
Read too: South Asia in Brink on Kashmir and Indus Water Treaty, Bilawal warns US legislators
Meanwhile, Senator Sherry Rehman went to a press conference, describing the recent conflict with India as simply a “trailer” of Pakistan’s coordinated response.
She declared: “This war was part of India’s strategy to maintain the region in a Bollywood -style tension,” highlighting how the Indian media had promoted the feelings of war while minimizing peace narrative.
She emphasized that Pakistan’s military response was “legal and limited”, but warned about the catastrophic consequences that any misunderstanding between the two nuclear powers could trigger. “A nuclear conflict in a densely populated and sensitive region like South Asia would be uncontrollable,” he warned.
Sherry also expressed his gratitude for the intervention of the United States, which helped negotiate the fire, but warned: “If there is no negotiation process with a purpose and principles, this trailer could soon become a global tragedy.”
In addition, he emphasized that a solution to the Kashmir problem requires a “severe and multilateral negotiation framework”, pointing out the reluctance of India to participate in such conversations and its rejection of third -party mediation, which considered essential for any significant process.
Read more: India by placing land for ‘First Nuclear Water War’, says Bilawal
Last month, tensions between Pakistan and India and intensified after Pahalgam’s mortal attack in Jammu and Kashmir (Iiojk).
On May 7, India launched air attacks on Pakistani soil, which led Pakistan to counteract with the Bunyanum Marsoos operation. The fire was reached on May 10, facilitated by the United States.