In a resolute reaffirmation of its long-held position, India on Tuesday reiterated that the only matter open for discussion with Pakistan is the vacation of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), dismissing any possibility of third-party mediation. This comes after fresh mediation overtures from the United States and recent remarks by Prime Minister Narendra Modi following Operation Sindoor.
Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal, during a regular media briefing, emphasized that India’s position on Jammu and Kashmir remains unchanged. “Our consistent national position is that issues concerning the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir must be addressed bilaterally between India and Pakistan,” Jaiswal stated. He reaffirmed that “the outstanding matter is the vacation of illegally occupied territory by Pakistan.”
Modi asserts shift in counterterrorism approach
Prime Minister Modi, in his first address since the Pahalgam terror attack that claimed 26 lives, largely civilians, doubled down on India’s hardened doctrine. He declared that “terror and talks can’t go together,” sending a clear message that normalization with Pakistan would be contingent on dismantling terror infrastructure and the return of PoK.
“If we ever talk to Pakistan, it will be on terror and PoK only,” the Prime Minister asserted, underlining a strategic pivot in India’s engagement policy. He also referred to the suspended Indus Waters Treaty, hinting that the flow of water, like trade and talks, is conditional on cessation of terror.
US mediation offers firmly rejected
The Indian response came amid renewed efforts by US President Donald Trump to position Washington as a peacemaker in the decades-old Kashmir dispute. Trump recently declared he would assist in finding a “solution after a thousand years” to the Kashmir issue, a proposal welcomed by Islamabad but summarily rejected by New Delhi.
This was not the first such offer. In 2019, Trump had controversially claimed that PM Modi had requested his mediation—a claim India swiftly denied. At the time, the MEA had clarified that no such request was made, emphasizing again that Kashmir is strictly a bilateral matter.
Following India’s strong response, the US State Department realigned its position, stating that it sees Kashmir as a matter to be resolved between New Delhi and Islamabad, offering only limited assistance if needed.
India’s posture remains grounded in a clear strategic vision—any future dialogue with Pakistan will revolve solely around the return of illegally held territory and dismantling of cross-border terrorism.