Jaipur, May 15 -- All India Congress Committee General Secretary Sachin Pilot on Wednesday urged the Centre to clarify its stance on former US President Donald Trump's mediation remarks on India and Pakistan, and called for a special Parliament session to reaffirm the 1994 resolution asserting India's claim over Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). Expressing concern over Trump's comments, Pilot accused him of equating India with Pakistan and internationalising the Kashmir issue, while ignoring the core concern of terrorism. "The US President has claimed that he secured a ceasefire between India and Pakistan using increased trade as leverage. That statement is deeply surprising," said Pilot addressing reporters. "India has fought several wars but this is the first time a ceasefire is being declared by a foreign President. A few hours later, our DGMO confirmed the ceasefire-this sequence of events raises serious questions." Criticising Trump's repeated omission of terrorism in his statements, Pilot said, "State-sponsored terrorism from Pakistan is the real issue between India and Pakistan. Unfortunately, Trump has not mentioned it even once. Neither the US administration nor the Vice President has condemned Pakistan's role in cross-border terrorism or offered any assurance that it will stop." He also rejected the US attempt to bring Kashmir into the conversation, saying it is a bilateral issue between India and Pakistan and not open to third-party intervention. "Our issue is terrorism, not Kashmir. By dragging Kashmir into it, Trump has unnecessarily complicated the matter," said Pilot. Recalling a resolution passed unanimously by Parliament in 1994 calling for the return of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), Pilot urged the government to convene a special session of Parliament to reaffirm that commitment and remove any prevailing confusion. "The 1994 resolution is on record. In light of recent developments and the misleading narrative, a special session should be called and the resolution should be reiterated so there is no ambiguity about India's position," he said. Pilot said that Trump's narrative is attempting to re-hyphenate India and Pakistan. "Because of the efforts in the last 20 years, we have grown to a larger economy. We have a global presence and people were talking about Indo-China when it was about economy, population, military etc. but this development has actually brought us back to the early 90s when India and Pakistan were hyphenated which is not a good sign," he said. He said that India was nowhere compared to Pakistan. Pilot said that somewhere an attempt is being made to weigh India and Pakistan on the same scale once again and that is not a good sign for diplomacy, foreign policy and for India's future. He appreciated the defence forces for successfully carrying out Operation Sindoor and destroying infrastructure of terror with precision. "Operation Sindoor is a brilliant operation and the precision with which our forces have done is excellent," he said. Pilot also condemned the objectionable remarks allegedly made by Madhya Pradesh minister Vijay Shah against colonel Sofiya Qureshi, Indian army officer who co-led the media briefings on Operation Sindoor. Pilot said that such disrespect towards the officer was completely unacceptable. "The kind of remarks made by the Madhya Pradesh minister make it clear that he no longer deserves a place in the cabinet. The BJP's top leadership must apologize. The disrespect shown towards our brave Colonel Qureshi, whose family has served in the armed forces for three generations, is absolutely unacceptable." BJP spokesperson, Laxmikant Bharadwaj in response said the Prime Minister has already clarified that there was no foreign interference and that the ceasefire was initiated following a request from Pakistan. He added that the Prime Minister has made it clear that any talks with Pakistan will only be about Kashmir and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), and that terrorism and trade cannot go hand in hand....