President Donald Trump is willing to help convey the Kashmir conflict between India and Pakistan, the US Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said.
When he spoke on a press release on Tuesday, spokesman Tammy Bruce said the president’s efforts are consistently aimed at resolving deeply rooted global conflicts.
“President Trump has been the only one who brought certain people to the table to have conversations that no one thought were possible,” she said. “It shouldn’t surprise anyone that he would do something similar.”
Read more: After ceasefire, Trump Eyes Kashmir Deal
Asking the US Administration may support a UN Security Council’s resolution or host leaders from both countries, Bruce said she couldn’t talk to the president’s future plans.
As much as Modi -Band does not want to hear the K word, the state department Tammy Bruce blasts again. She says that mediation on Kashmir between India and Pakistan is very much on the mind of President Trump. pic.twitter.com/r5kpzaljrd
– Murtaza Solangi (@murtazasolangi) June 11, 2025
“But the world knows his nature,” she said. “It’s an exciting time … and I hope maybe something like that can be resolved to the president too [leaves office]. “
Bruce also confirmed PPP chairman Bilawal Bhuttozze-Zze met under secretary of political affairs Allison Hooker during a visit to Washington last week.
“They repeated us support for the ongoing ceasefire – as you might imagine, thank you God – between Pakistan and India,” said spokesman for the Bruce State Department. “They also discussed important questions to the bilateral relationship, including CounterTrorismism collaboration.”
The Pakistani delegation visited Washington from May 31 to June 6 and met more than a dozen US lawmakers and officials in the senior department.
Bilawal Bhutto also presented Pakistan’s view of Indian military actions, rising regional tensions and concerns about the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty.
Read: India lays down to ‘first nuclear water war’, says Bilawal
The Indian parliamentary delegation was also in Washington during the same period. Deputy Secretary Landau met the group and confirmed a strong US support to India in his terrorist efforts and wider strategic ties.
Last month after a short military resistance, the United States announced a ceasefire on May 10th. President Trump later wrote about truth social: “I will work with you, both to see if after a ‘thousand years’, a solution can be reached to Kashmir.”
Read more: ‘I got that war stopped’: Trump on Pakistan-India Army
Pakistan welcomed the offer while India rejected it and maintained that Kashmir is strictly a bilateral case.
In an interview with AFP, Bilawal Bhutto-Zze-Zoni called on US President Donald Trump to play an active role in bringing India to the negotiating table for extensive conversations with Pakistan.
He emphasized that although Pakistan remains open to discussions about terrorism, the Kashmir conflict must be the central focus of any meaningful dialogue.
Formerly President Trump Pakistan’s handling of recent tensions with India praised and called its leadership “very strong.” Trump noted that he was talking to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, “Some people don’t like when I say it, but that’s what it is,” and credited his diplomatic efforts to help dropping the crisis.