US VP Vance says war between India and Pakistan will be 'none of our business'
- United States Vice President JD Vance said that the US cannot control the nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, and a war between them would be "none of our business".
- The latest escalation in the decades-old India-Pakistan rivalry began on April 22 when militants killed 26 people in India-administered Kashmir.
- India and Pakistan accused each other of launching drone attacks, with Pakistan's defence minister saying further retaliation was "increasingly certain" on the second day of major clashes.
120 Articles
120 Articles
Vance Called India Urging Communication, De-escalation
Vice President JD Vance called Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday to urge him to communicate with Pakistan directly and consider options for de-escalation, reports CNN. The report comes a day after Vance said that the U.S. cannot control the nuclear-armed Asian neighbors and that a war between them would be “none of our business.” “We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can’t control these countries, though,” Van…
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.
Vice President Vance says India-Pakistan fighting is ‘none of our business’
Vice President Vance said that the current escalation between India and Pakistan was “fundamentally none of our business,” as they traded blows overnight Thursday and early Friday evening using drones and projectiles, reaching places that have not been targeted in decades on either side.Vance spoke on Fox News late Thursday, in response to a question about if the Trump administration was worried about nuclear conflict. “We want this thing to de-…
TAC Right Now: How Strong Is Anti-War Conservatism?
Andrew Day, Sumantra Maitra, and Joseph Addington discuss the strength of the anti-war right, President Trump’s meeting with Canada’s new prime minister, and the India-Pakistan conflict. Recorded May 8, 2025. The post TAC Right Now: How Strong Is Anti-War Conservatism? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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