Pakistan says ceasefire with India extended till May 18, Trump says both 鈥榲ery happy鈥�

Pakistan鈥檚 Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar is addressing a session of Senate in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 14, 2025. (Senate of Pakistan/File)
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  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar says Pakistan seeks 鈥渃omposite dialogue鈥� with India to resolve outstanding issues
  • Speaking to troops during Gulf tour, Trump said on Thursday hostilities between Pakistan and India were 鈥渟ettled鈥�

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan鈥檚 Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Thursday the militaries of India and Pakistan had agreed to extend last week鈥檚 ceasefire till Sunday, May 18, while President Donald Trump said both nations were 鈥渧ery happy鈥� with the truce brokered by his administration last week.

Pakistan and India agreed to a ceasefire on Saturday after four days of the worst fighting since 1999 between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, who attacked each other with missiles, drones, fighter jets, and artillery fire. Tensions began when India alleged Pakistan was involved in an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 tourists last month. Islamabad denied involvement and called for an international probe into the incident. 

Tensions came to a head last Wednesday when India fired missiles into Pakistan, claiming it had struck 鈥渢errorist camps.鈥� Pakistan said civilians had been killed and vowed retribution, saying it had downed five Indian jets. The worst of the fighting happened on Saturday when India attacked Pakistani air bases and Pakistan launched retaliatory strikes on military facilities and storage units. As the conflict spiraled alarmingly, US President Trump announced Washington had brokered a ceasefire on Saturday. 

The fragile ceasefire has been holding so far with only reports of a few violations on the first day. 

鈥淣ow it [ceasefire] has been extended till [May] 18, so obviously, now ultimately, things will go to the dialogue,鈥� Dar said in televised comments to parliament. 鈥淔or now, these are military-to-military communications, so obviously, then political dialogue will take place. The resolution of all issues lies there.鈥�

Dar said the two nations needed to re-engage in a composite dialogue, which was a structured process initiated in 1997 to address a wide range of bilateral concerns, including peace and security, Kashmir, water, and economic cooperation. 

As tensions surged between India and Pakistan last month, both announced a raft of punitive measures against each other, including New Delhi unilaterally suspending the 1960 Indus Waters treaty, which governs the sharing of river waters.

India鈥檚 foreign minister said on Thursday the treaty with Pakistan would remain suspended until Islamabad ends 鈥渃ross-border terrorism.鈥�

鈥淔or us, this is a no-go area,鈥� Dar told lawmakers. 鈥淲e had announced it on April 24 as well that it [treaty suspension] will be treated as an act of war.鈥�

India and Pakistan, both bitter rivals who possess nuclear weapons, have fought three wars since 1947 after gaining independence from British colonial India. The root cause of their conflict is the disputed Himalayan Kashmir region, which they both claim in full but administer only parts of. 

Speaking to troops at a base in Qatar during a Middle East tour, Trump said on Thursday hostilities between Pakistan and India were settled.

 

鈥淎nd Pakistan was very happy with that [ceasefire] and India was very happy with that and I think they鈥檙e on the way,鈥� Trump said. 

鈥淲e got that settled where everybody was very happy. I鈥檒l tell you that it looked like it was really going to be escalating out of control.鈥�