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PM Modi draws diplomatic red lines as Donald Trump engages Pakistan amid Iran conflict | cliQ Latest

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India is navigating an increasingly complex diplomatic landscape as tensions rise between the US and Iran, and US President Donald Trump’s unpredictable overtures toward Pakistan raise eyebrows in New Delhi. Amid this, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has taken a firm stand, signalling India’s boundaries through a high-level call with Iran’s new President Masoud Pezeshkian. The 45-minute conversation, which emphasized India’s role in de-escalating the region, came shortly after a shorter phone call with Donald Trump and served as a subtle yet strong message: India will not remain silent if its core concerns—like cross-border terrorism—are brushed aside by allies.

Donald Trump’s Outreach to Pakistan Sparks Concern

India’s unease deepened after Donald Trump hosted Pakistan’s Army Chief General Asim Munir at the White House for a lunch meeting. This same Munir is regarded by Indian officials as the mastermind behind the recent Pahalgam terror attack and a vocal proponent of hardline anti-India rhetoric, including calls for Kashmir’s separation and a revival of the two-nation theory.

India’s frustration is not only with the gesture itself but the timing. As Donald Trump eyes Pakistani support amid US strikes on Iran, Munir’s high-profile visit and Pakistan’s nomination of Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize seem like transactional diplomacy at play—something India views with deep skepticism.

Donald Trump’s diplomatic style, known for abrupt U-turns, adds to the unpredictability. Just a few years ago, he slammed Pakistan as a haven of lies and deceit, accusing it of misusing $33 billion in US aid. Today, he praises the same military leadership and undermines India’s security concerns.

India’s Subtle but Firm Diplomatic Messaging

The PM Modi-Pezeshkian call wasn’t just about regional peace; it was about India asserting its geopolitical role. The duration of the call itself—ten minutes longer than PM Modi’s conversation with Donald Trump—is symbolic. Pezeshkian referred to India as a friend and invited New Delhi to play a mediatory role in stabilizing the region, a nod to India’s balancing act in West Asia.

India’s message to Washington is clear: friendship doesn’t mean unconditional agreement. Hosting a military figure like Munir—whom India deems responsible for sponsoring terrorism—crosses a diplomatic red line. PM Modi’s refusal to stop over in the US after his Canada trip, avoiding what could have been an awkward meeting with Munir at the White House, underscores that message.

India also remains engaged in its own internal and diplomatic battle. Operation Sindoor—India’s counter-terrorism response following recent attacks—remains ongoing. At the global level, the challenge is to decouple India from Pakistan in international narratives. Donald Trump’s claim that he mediated between the two nations undermines India’s diplomatic position, especially when India never asked for mediation in the first place.

This latest turn of events signals what many in Raisina Hill are calling the “new normal” in diplomacy: India will spell out its expectations, even to long-standing allies like the US. That includes demanding respect for its red lines—no mediation between India and Pakistan, no legitimizing state-sponsored terror, and no backdoor diplomacy that ignores India’s strategic sensitivities.

Through these calibrated moves, India is asserting that while it values partnerships, it will not hesitate to push back when its national interests are at stake.

The post PM Modi draws diplomatic red lines as Donald Trump engages Pakistan amid Iran conflict | cliQ Latest appeared first on CliQ INDIA.

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