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  • Thu. Jan 1st, 2026

China joins Trump to claim it mediated India-Pakistan ceasefire

ByRomeo Minalane

Jan 1, 2026
China joins Trump to claim it mediated India-Pakistan ceasefire

China has claimed it helped mediate the May standoff between India and Pakistan, a claim New Delhi has firmly rejected, insisting the crisis was resolved through direct bilateral channels.

After the
United States, China has now asserted that it played a mediating role in easing tensions between
India and Pakistan during the May confrontation, even as New Delhi has repeatedly dismissed any third-party involvement and maintained that the situation was resolved through direct engagement between the two sides.

In his latest remarks earlier this week, US President
Donald Trump once again claimed he had helped resolve the India–Pakistan conflict during his bilateral meeting with visiting Benjamin Netanyahu.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

Speaking at the Symposium on the International Situation and China’s Foreign Relations in Beijing on Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said the world was witnessing a surge in conflict and instability. “This year, local wars and cross-border conflicts flared up more often than at any time since the end of WWII. Geopolitical turbulence continued to spread,” he said.

Wang added that China had adopted an “objective and just stance” in addressing global disputes. “To build peace that lasts, we have taken an objective and just stance, and focused on addressing both symptoms and root causes,” he said, as quoted by PTI.

China’s mediation claims and wider conflicts

Outlining Beijing’s approach, Wang said, “Following this Chinese approach to settling hotspot issues, we mediated in northern Myanmar, the Iranian nuclear issue, the tensions between Pakistan and India, the issues between Palestine and Israel, and the recent conflict between Cambodia and Thailand.”

His remarks come months after the military confrontation between India and Pakistan in May, which followed a terror attack in Pahalgam on April 22. India launched Operation Sindoor, striking terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, before expanding operations to include military installations.

India’s response and background to the standoff

India has consistently said the four-day confrontation ended through direct military-to-military communication, without any external mediation. At a press briefing on May 13, the Ministry of External Affairs rejected claims of outside involvement. “Regarding the ceasefire and what sort of role other countries played, etc. See, the specific date, time and wording of the understanding was worked out between the DGMOs of the two countries at their phone call on 10th May 2025, commencing at 15:35 hours,” the ministry said.

New Delhi has long maintained that there is no scope for third-party intervention in matters between India and Pakistan.

Questions have also been raised about China’s role during the conflict, particularly in relation to its military ties with Pakistan. China is Pakistan’s largest arms supplier, accounting for over 81 per cent of its military equipment. Diplomatically, Beijing called for restraint on the first day of Operation

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