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Donald Trump at UNGA claimed his administration ended seven major wars, citing peace deals between India and Pakistan.

US President Donald Trump addresses the UN General Assembly.
US President Donald Trump used his speech at the United Nations General Assembly to cast himself as a peacemaker, declaring that he has ended “seven unendable wars” during his second term so far.
“People told me these conflicts could never be solved,” Donald Trump said, before listing disputes he claimed to have settled: between Cambodia and Thailand; Kosovo and Serbia; Pakistan and India; Israel and Iran; Egypt and Ethiopia; Armenia and Azerbaijan; and the ‘vicious violent war’ between DR Congo and Rwanda.
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“No other president has ever done anything close to that,” Donald Trump told world leaders, adding that the UN “did not even try to help” in resolving these disputes.
The address marked Donald Trump’s first appearance at the UNGA since 2020. Framing his foreign policy as a historic achievement, he said the US had restored its role as the “ultimate broker of peace.”
Donald Trump has repeatedly touted the claim of ending seven major conflicts, though several of the disputes he cites remain unresolved or highly fragile.
New York, United States of America (USA)
September 23, 2025, 19:55 IST
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