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[VIDEO] India requested US to help de-escalate after Pakistan’s retaliation-CNN

ethan hunt

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This is huge from CNN. Essentially saying the missile barrage from pakistan had India scrambling for deescalation.

🚨BIG: CNN reporter states that it was India who contacted USA to help stop the war after Pakistan went berserk with missiles on India, against Indian expectations

 
This is huge from CNN. Essentially saying the missile barrage from pakistan had India scrambling for deescalation.

🚨BIG: CNN reporter states that it was India who contacted USA to help stop the war after Pakistan went berserk with missiles on India, against Indian expectations

Bharatis will ignore this and still claim Pakistan was able to do nothing. 🤣
 
This is huge from CNN. Essentially saying the missile barrage from pakistan had India scrambling for deescalation.

🚨BIG: CNN reporter states that it was India who contacted USA to help stop the war after Pakistan went berserk with missiles on India, against Indian expectations

Ladies and gentlemen - India begging Amreeka for help - what happened?

Why didn't India beg Isreal for help?

Next time an Indian mentions begging, remind them of this war and that its not always people beg for money, no India begged for mercy from Pakistan.
 
This is huge from CNN. Essentially saying the missile barrage from pakistan had India scrambling for deescalation.

🚨BIG: CNN reporter states that it was India who contacted USA to help stop the war after Pakistan went berserk with missiles on India, against Indian expectations

According to a Pakistani source, the reporter says.
 
According to a Pakistani source, the reporter says.
Watch the post #3 clip .it was Pakistan who asked for de- escalation .

Pakistan's Directors General of Military Operations (DGMO) called Indian DGMO at 15:35 hours earlier this afternoon. It was agreed between them that both sides would stop all firing and military action on land and in the air and sea with effect from 1700 hours Indian Standard Time

:kp
 
This was well known but there is no harm in it. By surrendering India so quickly saved so many lives.

Good on them.
 
Ceasefire announced in the evening( 5:30 PM) and after the ceasefire Pakistan attacked on Indian cities with drone and Heavy firing Along with LOC and IB/ WB

Pakistan DGMO contacted indian DGMO at 3:30 PM IST FOR Ceasefire and after that no attack took place from Indian side.

Pakistan break the ceasefire .
 
Ceasefire announced in the evening( 5:30 PM) and after the ceasefire Pakistan attacked on Indian cities with drone and Heavy firing Along with LOC and IB/ WB

Pakistan DGMO contacted indian DGMO at 3:30 PM IST FOR Ceasefire and after that no attack took place from Indian side.

Pakistan break the ceasefire .

G Sar boht acha Sar
 
This appears to be from the video posted above itself.

It says India was shocked by the Pak response.

CNN have sources to the American government. You can deny this all you want but they are not going to make this up.

Modi’s government is an authoritarian one - never ever going to admit anything publicly be it the lost Indian jets, or what Pak did in response last night.
 
It says India was shocked by the Pak response.

CNN have sources to the American government. You can deny this all you want but they are not going to make this up.

Modi’s government is an authoritarian one - never ever going to admit anything publicly be it the lost Indian jets, or what Pak did in response last night.

I'm not denying anything about the source. Watch the video above. He clearly emphasises "what Pakistan says" for both the barrage that Pakistan sent at India and to determine who reached out for diplomacy first.

This thread is alleging that CNN has confirmed that India reached out for diplomacy . They haven't.
 
India is like that notorious toddler when they're throwing a loud tantrum. They think they have the upper hand but when the chapair from abbu comes, that's what eventually settles it.
 
I'm not denying anything about the source. Watch the video above. He clearly emphasises "what Pakistan says" for both the barrage that Pakistan sent at India and to determine who reached out for diplomacy first.

This thread is alleging that CNN has confirmed that India reached out for diplomacy . They haven't.
Diplomacy between two warring sides requires a mediator and both sides willing to deescalate.

If you want to call this a stalemate after India initiated this adventure ok I can call it a stalemate but Pakistan responded decisively be it defensively and offensively.

I honestly don’t belive this went the way India had hoped, no matter what propaganda the Modi media apparatus will convey to their audience.

If anything I’m seeing a number of Indians in recent days not buying the BS narratives a lot of the Indian outlets were reporting because the lies became too easy to debunk.
 
Diplomacy between two warring sides requires a mediator and both sides willing to deescalate.

If you want to call this a stalemate after India initiated this adventure ok I can call it a stalemate but Pakistan responded decisively be it defensively and offensively.

I honestly don’t belive this went the way India had hoped, no matter what propaganda the Modi media apparatus will convey to their audience.

If anything I’m seeing a number of Indians in recent days not buying the BS narratives a lot of the Indian outlets were reporting because the lies became too easy to debunk.

This is not about who won or whether it was a stalemate. I'm not saying anything about that at all.

I'm just saying that the CNN reporter does not actually say that India called for diplomacy
 
around 6.20 says pakistan shot down 2 indian fighter jets or as i call them paper airplanes:

 
@Devadwal now you know which "alarming" conditions forced some for ceasefire 👇
====
Vance called Indian prime minister to encourage ceasefire talks after receiving alarming intelligence, sources say

A core group of top US officials — including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State and interim national security adviser Marco Rubio, and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles — had been closely monitoring the escalating conflict between India and Pakistan when on Friday morning, the US received alarming intelligence, Trump administration officials told CNN. While they declined to describe the nature of the information, citing its sensitivity, they said it was critical in persuading the three officials that the US should increase its involvement.

Vance himself would call Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The vice president briefed President Donald Trump on the plan, then spoke with Modi at noon ET on Friday, making clear to the Indian prime minister that the White House believed there was a high probability for dramatic escalation as the conflict went into the weekend, the administration officials said. Vance encouraged Modi to have his country communicate with Pakistan directly and to consider options for de-escalation, the officials said. The behind-the-scenes details of the US involvement have not previously been reported.

India and Pakistan agree to ceasefire after weeks of tensions

At that point, the officials said, the US believed the nuclear-armed neighbors were not talking, and it needed to get them back to the bargaining table. Vance also outlined to Modi a potential off-ramp that the US understood the Pakistanis would be amenable to, the officials said, though they did not offer details.

Following the call, State Department officials, including Rubio, began working the phones with their counterparts in India and Pakistan through the night, the sources said.

Rubio had been calling people in the region beginning Tuesday with a general idea of how to reach a ceasefire, but the administration left the finer details of the agreement for India and Pakistan to work out directly.

“There was a lot of effort going on to try and tamp down escalation earlier in the week, and it was clear at that point that the two sides weren’t talking,” one of the officials familiar with Rubio’s calls to his counterparts said.

“The goal earlier this week was to encourage India and Pakistan to talk with our counterparts and figure out a path to de-escalation through a ceasefire, and through the course of those conversations, US officials were able to gain insights into what those potential off-ramps look like for both sides, and be able to help relay that message and bridge some of that communications divide, which then allowed the two sides to actually talk and get to the point where we are now,” the source said.

The Trump administration was not involved in helping draft the agreement, the administration officials said and viewed its role mostly as getting the two sides to talk. But from the US perspective, Vance’s call to Modi was a critical moment. Vance traveled to India and met with the prime minister last month, and Trump officials believed his relationship with Modi would help on the call, officials said.

The US takes credit for India-Pakistan ceasefire, but it was pushing on an open door

Vance’s call with Modi came just a day after the vice president said the conflict was “none of our business,” downplaying the potential for US influence.

“What we can do is try to encourage these folks to de-escalate a little bit, but we’re not going to get involved in the middle of war that’s fundamentally none of our business and has nothing to do with America’s ability to control it,” Vance told Fox News on Thursday.

“You know, America can’t tell the Indians to lay down their arms. We can’t tell the Pakistanis to lay down their arms. And so, we’re going to continue to pursue this thing through diplomatic channels,” Vance said.

The ceasefire was reached following a day of intense fighting Saturday. The Trump administration officials said precise details of how the ceasefire will be monitored are still being determined. Blasts were heard in India-administered Kashmir and over Pakistan-administered Kashmir hours after the ceasefire announcement.

Trump announced the “full and immediate ceasefire” on social media Saturday morning, and Rubio minutes later posted, “I am pleased to announce the Governments of India and Pakistan have agreed to an immediate ceasefire and to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site.”

State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said the ceasefire was a result of several conversations between Rubio and Vance over the past 48 hours between top officials in each country. “It was a beautiful partnership,” Bruce said Saturday on NewsNation, praising Vance and Rubio for “implementing the insight and vision of President Trump.”

India and Pakistan agree to a ceasefire, but will it hold? Here’s what to know

While Pakistan praised US involvement in the talks, India has downplayed it.

“We thank President Trump for his leadership and proactive role for peace in the region,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif wrote on X about three hours after Trump announced the ceasefire.

India’s foreign secretary, Vikram Misri, did not mention US involvement when announcing the agreement, and an Indian statement said the deal was worked out “directly” between the two countries.

It should not be surprising that these bitter rivals have given contradictory accounts of how the ceasefire was reached. In their long history of tensions, India and Pakistan have both viewed foreign intervention differently. India, which views itself as an ascendant superpower, has long been resistant to international mediation, whereas Pakistan, which is heavily dependent on foreign aid, tends to welcome it, analysts say.

Source: CNN
 
no surprise there, this was a massive strategic blunder by india, theres been no war objectives since day one, the neutral confirmation is nice but outside india no one believes the indian narrative anyway. indians should acknowledge the role the us has played in mediating the conflict at least, but if it helps them save face domestically and avoid further conflict than i dont think America will care too much.
 
no surprise there, this was a massive strategic blunder by india, theres been no war objectives since day one, the neutral confirmation is nice but outside india no one believes the indian narrative anyway. indians should acknowledge the role the us has played in mediating the conflict at least, but if it helps them save face domestically and avoid further conflict than i dont think America will care too much.
nothing new, lets see what the cry babies say tomorrow morning
 
One thing is for sure within a couple years another war is coming. The Inds with their radical, Hindutva ideolgy determined to kill off PK and if they keep trying, sooner or later there will be no winner.
 
Indians got a beating that they will remember for eternity. They should stick to hosting the IPL, creating Bollywood movies, providing cheap labour to the West and being a huge consumer market for the world but leave the war fighting to the actual real men.
 
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PK better start to improve it's PR because we need our case to be heard against this radicalised, Hindutiva state that is trying to bully PK into submission and that can't and will not be allowed to happen. The man to do is locked up in a prison and as this war showed, you not only have to win on the battle field, you have to win the PR war on social media and amongst the opinion formers. IK must be released now. If anyone is any doubt about what the Hindutuva are planning, they won't be now.
 
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LOL. It is funny.

They asked for a ceasefire within 3-4 days. They couldn't handle the heat.

They learned the difference between chest thumping and actual war. :inti
 
As per Prime Minister Modi’s address to the nation and the Indian Army’s official press conference, Pakistan reached out to India’s Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) on the afternoon of May 10th, requesting a ceasefire.

Interestingly, no official denial has come from the Pakistani government, which suggests that this version of events may indeed be accurate.

Regarding Donald Trump’s statement—he has a tendency to claim credit for various developments. In fact, when Operation Sindoor began on Tuesday, both he and JD Vance stated that India and Pakistan would resolve the matter on their own. So, what changed for the U.S. to suddenly claim a role in brokering peace?

The way I see it: Pakistan reached out to India on May 10th, a ceasefire was mutually agreed upon, and only afterward was this information passed along to the U.S. Trump then attempted to take credit via his Truth Social post.
 
That's what you call bringing them down to their knees to show these Hindutva aatankis their worth (aukaat). Modi crying "Pakistan nay hum par he hamla kar diya":) tells you how shellshocked they got when Pakistan sent barrage of missiles and drones their way destroying their militant bases
 

Trump Takes Credit for Ending India-Pakistan Conflict — But Then Doesn’t Seem Totally Sure​


President Donald Trump once again claimed credit for ending the fighting between India and Pakistan during a speech to U.S. troops in Qatar on Thursday — before quickly undercutting his own boast with: “I think it’s settled.”

The remarks came as Trump recounted the arrest of an ISIS fighter behind the the 2021 bombing at Kabul airport, where 13 U.S. service members were killed.

“So we brought this horrible person to justice, to American justice,” he said. “We caught the person that set off that bomb. And all of this is possible because of the work that you do with partnerships that you forge. And in this case did was Pakistan.”

Trump then pivoted to the India-Pakistan conflict, saying: “And by the way, I don’t want to say I did, but I sure as hell helped settle the problem between Pakistan and India last week, which was getting more and more hostile and all ever the sudden you will start seeing missiles of a different type and we got it settled, I hope. I hope I don’t walk out of here two days later and find out it’s not settled. But I think it is settled.”

India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire on May 10 after four days of escalating military clashes sparked by a deadly Islamist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. Both sides launched drone and missile strikes, hitting military targets across the contested border and deep into each other’s territory.

As the threat of full-scale war loomed, however, Trump announced a U.S.-brokered ceasefire over the weekend — an account Pakistan welcomed but India denied, insisting the decision was bilateral. Each nation has since claimed victory, while analysts debate what, if anything, either side gained.

Trump will depart Qatar Thursday and head to the United Arab Emirates, the last stop of his Middle East trip.

 
Donald Trump now says he didn’t mediate, but helped.

Nobel Peace Prize downgraded to IPL Fair play award.

:kp
 
I wonder why India hasn't shot down Donald Trump if his claims are inaccurate? Let's face it, his public comments are making Modi look like a prize chump, and by extension India as a nation loses what little credibility it had.
 

Trump Takes Credit for Ending India-Pakistan Conflict — But Then Doesn’t Seem Totally Sure​


President Donald Trump once again claimed credit for ending the fighting between India and Pakistan during a speech to U.S. troops in Qatar on Thursday — before quickly undercutting his own boast with: “I think it’s settled.”

The remarks came as Trump recounted the arrest of an ISIS fighter behind the the 2021 bombing at Kabul airport, where 13 U.S. service members were killed.

“So we brought this horrible person to justice, to American justice,” he said. “We caught the person that set off that bomb. And all of this is possible because of the work that you do with partnerships that you forge. And in this case did was Pakistan.”

Trump then pivoted to the India-Pakistan conflict, saying: “And by the way, I don’t want to say I did, but I sure as hell helped settle the problem between Pakistan and India last week, which was getting more and more hostile and all ever the sudden you will start seeing missiles of a different type and we got it settled, I hope. I hope I don’t walk out of here two days later and find out it’s not settled. But I think it is settled.”

India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire on May 10 after four days of escalating military clashes sparked by a deadly Islamist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. Both sides launched drone and missile strikes, hitting military targets across the contested border and deep into each other’s territory.

As the threat of full-scale war loomed, however, Trump announced a U.S.-brokered ceasefire over the weekend — an account Pakistan welcomed but India denied, insisting the decision was bilateral. Each nation has since claimed victory, while analysts debate what, if anything, either side gained.

Trump will depart Qatar Thursday and head to the United Arab Emirates, the last stop of his Middle East trip.

 
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