President Donald Trump is willing to help mediate in the Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan, said the United States Department of State.
Speaking in a press information session on Tuesday, spokesman Tammy Bruce said that president’s efforts are constantly destined to resolve deeply rooted global conflicts.
“President Trump has been the only one to bring certain people to the table to have conversations that nobody thought they were possible,” he said. “I shouldn’t surprise anyone who wants to handle something like that.”
READ MORE: After the truce, Trump Eyes Kashmira treats
When asked if the US administration could support a resolution of the UN Security Council or host leaders from both countries, Bruce said he could not speak with the president’s future plans.
As much as Modi Gang does not want to listen to the word K, the spokesman for the state department Tammy Bruce explodes again. She says that mediation in Kashmir between India and Pakistan is in the mind of President Trump. pic.twitter.com/r5kpzaljrd
– Murtaza Solangi (@Murtazasolangi) June 11, 2025
“But the world knows its nature,” he said. “It’s an exciting moment … and I hope maybe something like this can also be resolved before the president [leaves office]. “
Bruce also confirmed that the president of the PPP, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, met under the Secretary of Political Affairs Allison Hooker during a visit to Washington last week.
“They reiterated the support of the United States for high the current fire, as you can imagine, thank God, between Pakistan and India,” said the state department spokesman Bruce. “They also discussed important issues with the bilateral relationship, including anti -terrorism cooperation.”
The Pakistani delegation visited Washington from May 31 to June 6, meeting with more than a dozen US legislators and senior officials of the State Department.
Bhutto de Bilawal also presented Pakistan’s opinions on Indian military actions, the increase in regional tensions and concern for the suspension of the swing of the Indo’s waters.
Read: India placing land for ‘First Nuclear Water War’, says Bilawal
The Indian parliamentary delegation was also in Washington during the same period. The deputy secretary Landau met with the group and reaffirmed a strong support from the United States to India in his anti -terrorist efforts and the broader strategic ties.
Last month after a brief military confrontation, the United States announced a high fire on May 10. President Trump then wrote in Truth Social: “I will work with you, both to see if, after” a thousand years “, you can reach a solution about Kashmir.”
READ MORE: ‘I obtained that war’: Trump in Pakistan-India Cesefire
Pakistan welcomed the offer, while India rejected it, maintaining that Kashmir is strictly a bilateral matter.
In an interview with AFP, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari urged the president of the United States, Donald Trump, to play an active role in bringing India to the negotiating table for integral conversations with Pakistan.
He emphasized that, although Pakistan remains open to discussions about terrorism, the conflict of Kashmir should be the central focus of any significant dialogue.
Previously, President Trump praised the management of Pakistan of recent tensions with India, qualifying his “very strong” leadership. Speaking together with German Failedrich Merz chancellor, Trump commented: “Some people will not like it when I say that, but it is what it is,” and they accredited their diplomatic efforts to help discourage the crisis.