“If I can do any help, I'll be there”: President Trump's tensions between India, Parker

“Oh, that's horrible. My position is that I'm all getting along well. I know very well and I want to see them fix it. I want to see them stop and hope they can stop now. They've gone tat, so hope they can stop now. I know both know very well and we're all good.
“The good relationship with the two, I hope to stop,” Trump said in response to the question of “war” between India and Pakistan.
David Perdue spoke in the Oval Office after his oath.
Hours after India's strike, Trump has said that India and Pakistan have been fighting for a long time and people know that “something will happen.” It's shameful that we've just heard about it while walking in the Oval (office). I think people know that people know something will happen because of a little bit of the past. They have been struggling for a long time.
When asked if he had any information about both countries, he said: “No, I just hope it ends soon.”
Meanwhile, a senior U.S. military commander said the U.S. is “closely watching the situation” after India's military strike.
“Now, publicity for anything. We are very careful about the situation. We are building nests in senior headquarters and USINDOPACOM as information about these strikes becomes clearer,” General Ronald Clark said in a digital press conference on Wednesday.
India launched Operation Sindor earlier on Wednesday, killing John and 26 people in Pahalgam, Kashmir, in retaliation against the April 22 terrorist attacks.
Pakistan Army spokesman Lieutenant Ahmed Sharif Choudhury said 31 people were killed and 57 others were injured in the Indian missile strike launched shortly after midnight.
In addition, after the Indian missile strike, Pakistani troops have been killed and injured in the years targeting the forward villages along Loc and Kashmir, at least 13 people, including four children and a soldier.