logo
‘Ready to pay price': PM Modi strong reply to Trump's 50% tariff threat, says ‘won't compromise…'

‘Ready to pay price': PM Modi strong reply to Trump's 50% tariff threat, says ‘won't compromise…'

Time of India07-08-2025
Prime Minister Modi hits back at Trump's 50% tariff threat on India over Russian oil imports. Speaking at the MS Swaminathan Conference, he declared: 'India will never compromise on farmers' interests… I am ready for the price.' Just a day earlier, Trump imposed a second 25% duty on India, warning of 'more secondary sanctions' ahead. The US has now slapped a total of 50% tariff—one of the highest in the world. Watch both leaders' statements here.
Show more
Show less
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wang Yi to meet PM on Tuesday ahead of Modi's China visit
Wang Yi to meet PM on Tuesday ahead of Modi's China visit

Time of India

time35 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Wang Yi to meet PM on Tuesday ahead of Modi's China visit

Wang Yi NEW DELHI: Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi will call on PM Narendra Modi on Tuesday, ahead of the latter's first visit to China in seven years. Modi is scheduled to travel to China from Aug 31-Sept 1 for the SCO summit in Tianjin where he is expected to hold bilateral meetings with President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Wang will land here Monday for a three-day visit in which he will hold talks with external affairs minister S Jaishankar and NSA Ajit Doval. While the foreign ministers' dialogue is scheduled for Monday evening, Wang and Doval will meet for the 24th round of Special Representatives talks on the boundary question on Tuesday morning. Wang's meeting with Modi will take place at 5.30 pm on Tuesday. He is expected to brief the PM about the agenda for the SCO summit and recent progress in Sino-India ties. Wang and Jaishankar will also look to finalise the agenda for the Modi-Xi bilateral. An announcement about resumption of direct flights between the two countries is expected soon.

From Nehru's kinship to Modi's firepower: India shifts tone on Pak
From Nehru's kinship to Modi's firepower: India shifts tone on Pak

Time of India

time35 minutes ago

  • Time of India

From Nehru's kinship to Modi's firepower: India shifts tone on Pak

NEW DELHI: "Our neighbour is Pakistan, which is a part of us, part of our hearts and arms. How do we even think of fighting them? This is like harming ourselves. And, if they are aggressive, they will harm themselves. This is a strange relationship between India and Pakistan. Strange relationship where there is sorrow and anger but ultimately that relationship is so close and for thousands of years that laws can't eradicate it. And, if something harms India, it will definitely harm Pakistan as well," Jawaharlal Nehru told the nation from the Red Fort in 1957 on Independence Day. Nearly seven decades later, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday struck a markedly different note. Signalling no rethink on the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) under present circumstances, he declared that India will not distinguish between terrorists and their sponsors, pointing directly at Pakistan's leadership. Prime Minister Modi underlined that the country would not succumb to "any sort of nuclear blackmail." "The Indus Waters Treaty was an injustice to the people of India. The rivers of India were irrigating the enemy country while our own farmers were deprived of water. Now, the right over India's share of water belongs only to India and its farmers. A compromise on farmers' interests and national interests is not acceptable to us. Not anymore," he said. Modi added, "India will no longer tolerate nuclear blackmail. If the enemy dares to commit any more misadventure, the armed forces will give them a befitting reply. India has decided that blood and water will not flow together." Recalling last month's strikes, Modi said, "Operation Sindoor was the expression of that outrage... Penetrating hundreds of kilometres into enemy territory, they reduced terrorist headquarters to dust... Pakistan is still sleepless." This stark contrast captures the transformation in India's attitude towards Pakistan. PM Modi's language of deterrence and retaliation has replaced the earlier vocabulary of kinship and restraint. From invoking Balochistan, Gilgit and PoK in his 2016 speech to citing deep-penetration strikes in 2025, his addresses reflect a conscious break from decades of what he has called misplaced sentimentality. By comparison, the Nehruvian era was shaped by reconciliation despite provocations. Nehru's framing of Pakistan as inseparable from India's "heart and arms" translated into policies like the IWT and territorial concessions under the Noon-Nehru Pact. Even in the face of aggression, he sought to preserve ties. Indira Gandhi's decisive 1971 victory did not fundamentally alter that mindset. Returning 90,000 Pakistani prisoners of war, according to experts, without securing a settlement on Kashmir reflected a continued view of Pakistan as a "brother". Rajiv Gandhi's Independence Day speeches largely bypassed Pakistan, centring instead on domestic modernisation. Even after terror struck deep, restraint prevailed. In 2009, less than a year after the 26/11 attacks, Manmohan Singh's address spoke only of honouring "special assurances and concessions provided to J&K" - a line that avoided naming Pakistan directly. From Nehru's fraternity to Modi's firepower, the arc of Independence Day speeches reveals how India's strategic outlook on Pakistan - and China - has hardened from conciliatory sentiment to hard-nosed realism.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store