Washington, DC [US], The United States has said it will not "get into the middle of the situation" following Pakistan's allegations against India and urged both countries to avoid escalating tensions and resolve differences through dialogue. Is. US response State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller was recently asked about Washington's stance on a UK media report that quoted Pakistani officials as accusing India of supporting terrorism and extremism on Pakistani soil. Have murdered people associated with it. Indian officials have called these allegations "false and malicious anti-India propaganda". “We are monitoring media reports regarding this issue,” he said. We have no comment on the underlying allegations, but certainly, although we are not going to intervene in this situation, we encourage both sides to avoid tensions and find solutions through dialogue," Matthew Miller. Miller said this in a press briefing when he was asked about America's reaction to the recent report of 'The Guardian' newspaper.Earlier in January also, Pakistan's efforts to link the case of death of two Pakistani citizens with India were officially rejected by the Ministry of External Affairs. Calling it "false and malicious anti-India propaganda", spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal had said, "We have seen media reports regarding certain comments of Pakistan's Foreign Secretary. This is Pakistan's latest attempt at false and malicious anti-India propaganda. As the world knows, Pakistan has long been a hub of terrorism, organized crime and illegal international activities. He said, "India and many other countries have publicly warned Pakistan that it will be consumed by its own culture of terror and violence. Pakistan will reap what it sows.Blaming others for one's misdeeds can neither be a justification nor a solution." Jaiswal made the remarks when Pakistan Foreign Secretary Muhammad Cyrus Sajja Qazi claimed that Indian agents were near Islamabad and in Sialkot and Rawalakot. There was "credible evidence" of links between the killing of two Pakistani nationals - Shahi Latif and Muhammad Riaz Latif, who were shot dead. A mosque in Sialkot has been declared a terrorist site in India, reports Dawn. Former Riyaz, linked to terrorist organization Jamaat-ud-Dawah, was killed in Rawalakot, The Express Tribune reported. In May last year, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had said that "victims of terrorism do not sit together with perpetrators of terrorism". Addressing a press conference after the Council of Foreign Ministers meeting of Pakistan, Jaishankar criticized Pakistan Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari's remarks "weaponizing terrorism", saying "victims of terrorism are the perpetrators of terrorism to discuss terrorism." Do not sit together with.Victims of terrorism defend themselves, retaliate." He said, "Acts of terrorism, they call it, they legitimize it and that's what I'm doing. To come here and preach these hypocritical words like We are on the same boat.''