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Brinks Report > Blog > World > “No One Gives Me Credit”: Trump Repeats Claim of Stopping Nuclear Conflict Between India-Pak
World

“No One Gives Me Credit”: Trump Repeats Claim of Stopping Nuclear Conflict Between India-Pak

Dolon Mondal
Last updated: May 17, 2025 2:12 pm
Dolon Mondal
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When 26 Indians lost their lives in the brutal Pahalgam terror attack on April 22, the response was swift and decisive. India launched Operation Sindoor on May 7, a cross-border military operation targeting terror camps deep inside Pakistan-occupied territory. Over the next four days, India faced down missile strikes, drone assaults, and propaganda spin. And yet, we didn’t blink.

On May 10, a ceasefire was reached. Enter Donald Trump—again.

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The former US President is back on Fox News, claiming he averted a nuclear conflict between India and Pakistan. “A bigger success than I’ll ever be given credit for,” he declared, proudly. According to him, a few phone calls and a trade talk about tariffs were enough to stop two nuclear powers from pushing the red button.

But here’s the truth: India didn’t need saving. We needed the world to stop coddling Pakistan.

India Was Calm. Pakistan Was Cornered.

Trump wants applause. But India didn’t fire first. We didn’t panic. We responded to a terror attack with a focused, military campaign aimed at Pakistan’s terror hubs—not civilians.

Pakistan, meanwhile, retaliated with reckless aggression, launching missiles at Indian bases on May 8, 9, and 10. India answered back with precision—holding the moral high ground, but not backing down.

It wasn’t Trump’s phone calls that stopped the conflict. It was India’s restraint backed by strength. It was our diplomacy and deterrence that drew the line in the sand.

And if you’re wondering what the average Indian should take from this? Simple: we’re not a charity case. We’re a global power that knows how to handle our business—even when the world prefers headlines over facts.

Why Trump’s Claims Don’t Hold Water

Trump said, “It was tit for tat… and the next one was going to be the N-word—nuclear.” He painted a picture of chaos. But that’s not what the ground reports say.

Even US media like The New York Times noted that India had more to lose from a drawn-out conflict and hence acted responsibly. The real fear was Pakistan’s internal chaos and poor nuclear command structure—not India.

Trump on India-Pakistan: “Everyone was stronger, stronger– to a point where the next one was gonna be you know what. The n word. You know what the n word is, right? It’s the n word. That’s very nasty word, right? In a lot of ways. The n word used in a nuclear sense.” pic.twitter.com/ed920GKmKV

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) May 16, 2025

Trump also claimed India offered to cut 100% of tariffs on US goods as part of his mediation efforts. That has not been confirmed by India. And honestly, if tariff talks are your way of “averting nuclear war,” maybe you’re not the peacemaker you think you are.

India’s Strength Was the Real Deterrent

Trump says he ended the standoff. But if India hadn’t hit back with Operation Sindoor, if our missile defense systems hadn’t worked, if our political leadership hadn’t stood united—we’d still be waiting for another terror strike.

So no, Mr. Trump. You didn’t stop a nuclear conflict. India prevented it—by being prepared, firm, and fearless.

Also Read Trump Announces $14.5 Billion Order for 28 Boeing Planes by Etihad Airways

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TAGGED:Donald TrumpIndianuclear conflictOperation SindoorPakistan
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