logo
Trump's Russia oil tariff threat depends on China, India reaction: Russell

Trump's Russia oil tariff threat depends on China, India reaction: Russell

Reuters30-03-2025

LAUNCESTON, Australia, March 31 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to impose secondary tariffs of 25% to 50% on buyers of Russian crude oil is just crazy and bold enough to perhaps achieve his stated aim of a ceasefire in Ukraine.
What matters now is the reaction of the other three key players to this latest move by the mercurial and inconsistent U.S. leader.
Do Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping believe that Trump will actually follow through, and if he does what will it mean for their energy situation?
India and China are effectively the only major buyers of Russian oil, so their reaction becomes as important as Putin's response to Trump's latest shift.
Trump told NBC News he is "pissed off" at Putin and will impose the tariffs of up to 50% on buyers of Russian crude if he feels Moscow is blocking efforts to bring about peace in Ukraine.
"If Russia and I are unable to make a deal on stopping the bloodshed in Ukraine, and if I think it was Russia's fault ... I am going to put secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia," Trump said.
This is an apparent reversal of his previous friendly stance toward Putin, which had drawn widespread criticism for effectively abandoning Ukraine to its invader and surrendering to Russia's aggression.
The question is whether Trump's threat is credible and likely to come to fruition, which is the assessment Russia, China and India must make.
If Putin believes Trump will go ahead and massively boost what are effectively sanctions on Russia's main export, he may be inclined to back down at least far enough to allow Trump to appear to have "won" in negotiations.
India is in an uncomfortable position as Modi has so far adopted a stance of trying to appease Trump, with a proposal to scrap the import duty on U.S. liquefied natural gas in order to boost purchases an example.
But India has also been a significant beneficiary of much of the rest of the world shunning Russian crude, allowing the South Asian nation to snap up discounted cargoes so much so that Russia is now its largest supplier.
India is expected to import 1.52 million barrels per day (bpd) of Russian oil in March, representing just under 30% of its total arrivals, according to data compiled by LSEG Oil Research.
With India already not buying crude from Iran because of U.S. sanctions, replacing Russian barrels as well would likely lead to a significant boost to India's oil import costs and a scramble to find alternative suppliers.
CHINA RISK
China is less likely to bow to U.S. pressure as it remains the only major buyer of Iranian crude, and is still a top importer of Russian oil, buying up to 1 million bpd from the seaborne market, as well as just under that level via pipeline.
The risk for Beijing is that an additional tariff of up to 50% on U.S. imports from China, on top of the 20% already imposed by Trump, would bring about real levels of pain in its economy, which is already struggling to build momentum.
If Trump's threat of secondary tariffs on buyers of Russian crude is credible, it also alters the dynamics of the OPEC+ group of exporters, which consists of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies including Russia.
For OPEC+ members other than Russia, any reduction in Russian barrels on global markets will likely serve to boost prices, which will allow them to increase their own production and exports.
In some ways it becomes a battle of self-interest versus group solidarity, and with the fiscal positions of many OPEC+ members weakening, the lure of more money from higher exports may be hard to resist.
For now, the various players are likely to respond cautiously, at least in public, while they try to work out whether Trump is serious or whether his new tariff threat is a thought bubble easily discarded with the next shift in sentiment.
Certainly, the initial market reaction was subdued, with global benchmark Brent futures rising a modest 0.3% to $73.84 a barrel in early Asian trade on Monday.
The views expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We're happy to have this fight': Trump administration leans into California protests
'We're happy to have this fight': Trump administration leans into California protests

NBC News

timean hour ago

  • NBC News

'We're happy to have this fight': Trump administration leans into California protests

President Donald Trump's immigration agenda has met a groundswell of opposition in Los Angeles, the country's second-largest city. At least 56 people have been arrested so far in massive protests against the administration's immigration raids in the city Friday. The demonstrations have spilled over onto one of the region's largest freeways, and federal authorities are facing criticism after they arrested, and apparently injured, a prominent labor leader. In response, the White House has threatened to arrest California's governor and mobilized Marines to support National Guard troops in defending federal property — even though state officials say they don't want the assistance and are now suing the administration. For the White House, this scene — Trump battling a blue state over his signature issue — is a win. It's a nationally watched saga of the sort that has long defined his career: a made-for-TV moment. 'We're happy to have this fight,' a White House official said, emphasizing that politically, the administration sees it as a winning issue. Democrats and immigration activists have broadly blasted the Los Angeles operation as illegal and inhumane and insisted that it's all about politics — and not about sound public policy. 'This Administration's actions are not about public safety — they're about stoking fear,' former Vice President Kamala Harris, a Los Angeles resident who ran against Trump last year, wrote in a statement. But Trump allies argue that it's simply Trump carrying out the hard-line immigration agenda that was the centerpiece of his campaign. NBC News spoke with four White House officials, in addition to other Trump supporters, who requested anonymity to speak candidly. 'This is what America voted for, period,' a Trump adviser said. 'This is the America First focus that got the president elected and is driven by nothing else than what he promised American voters.' 'Look at the violence, the attacks on law enforcement,' the adviser added. 'If Democrats want to support that, let them. This is why we win elections and they do not.' Trump advisers also pointed to the fact that the president's immigration policies continue to get high marks in most public polling. A CBS/YouGov poll conducted just before the Los Angeles immigration raids found that 54% of respondents approved of the administration's ' program to deport immigrants illegally.' Those numbers help clarify why the administration and more broadly congressional Republicans are politically comfortable leaning into support of the raids over vocal opposition from critics — and a persistent threat of legal challenge. 'I know there's no question places like California have thumbed their nose at the American people and decided they want to be a sanctuary for criminals,' Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said Monday, adding, 'I think he's exercising exactly what he said he'd do and what people elected him' to do. Trump advisers say the president also points to the fact that he got more votes in California in 2024 than in his previous campaigns, even though he still badly lost the heavily Democratic-leaning state. The administration's response to the protests does seem to have one eye on the reaction in conservative media, a space increasingly dominated by pro-Trump influencers. Some of those influencers have been posting from the protests — most notably Phil McGraw, a well-known Trump supporter better known as 'Dr. Phil,' who embedded with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents during the Los Angeles raids, as he did during similar immigration raids in Chicago this year. The Trump adviser, asked about McGraw's involvement, said: 'This is an important moment in American history. People have a right to see it in a way not unfairly skewed by a biased mainstream media.' The adviser wouldn't elaborate on how McGraw, whose presence was first reported by CNN, was able to have front-line access to the federal immigration operations. A spokesman for McGraw didn't respond to a request for comment. Republicans more broadly also see the fight as a political winner and say Democrats are functionally taking the bait on an issue in which polling has given Trump an advantage. 'I think it is a symptom of how far left this party has done when you have major Democrats standing on the side of illegal aliens that are torching vehicles,' Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis told Fox News on Monday. 'It is one of the reasons the Democratic Party is struggling so much nationally,' he added. Matthew Bartlett, a Republican strategist and former Trump administration official, said the raids shouldn't be a surprise because immigration is a 'legitimate issue' the voters have signaled they care about. 'There is no political upside in defending or denying the images of burning cars, rioters and looting and the destruction,' he said of Democrats. 'A feeling that things have spun out of control in California and that government can't effectively govern. … It has changed the conversation from illegal immigration to a breakdown in society.' Still, there has been some disagreement — at least in public messaging — about how far to push in going after California Democrats, a break between what may be politically popular with the base and what's politically realistic. The clearest example centers on the Trump administration's authorizing the deployment of National Guard troops over the opposition of California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass have argued that inserting National Guard troops will inflame tensions and potential violence — a response that has led Trump to signal he would consider arresting Newsom if he were to continue what the administration considers to be his interference. 'I would do it if I were Tom,' Trump said, referring to his 'border czar,' Tom Homan. 'I think it's great. Gavin likes the publicity. But I do think it would be a great thing.' While detaining Newsom would no doubt please Trump's MAGA base, White House officials privately say it's not currently in the cards. 'It's not being actively planned or considered,' a senior White House official said. 'But anyone who breaks federal law puts themselves at risk of being arrested. That's just a basic fact.' A second White House official said that if either Newsom or Bass, a former Democratic congresswoman, do something at odds with federal immigration law, they could be detained. But the official also acknowledged that the optics of arresting California officials amid an immigration fight they believe most Americans support could backfire with some Republican voters because, at the moment, it doesn't appear they have actually broken any immigration laws. The official said there isn't some grand strategy to deploy National Guard troops in blue cities across the country; the administration is simply waiting to see whether other protests get out of control. Meanwhile, Newsom has leaned into the threats, practically daring the administration to arrest him rather than focusing on the protesters. 'He's a tough guy. Why doesn't he do that? He knows where to find me,' Newsom told MSNBC on Sunday. Referring to Homan, he added: 'That kind of bloviating is exhausting. So, Tom, arrest me. Let's go.' On Monday, California sued the Trump administration, arguing that Trump's federalizing the state's National Guard is 'unlawful.' 'Let me be clear: There is no invasion. There is no rebellion,' Democratic state Attorney General Rob Bonta said. 'The president is trying to manufacture chaos and crisis on the ground for his own political ends. Federalizing the California National Guard is an abuse of the president's authority under the law — and not one we take lightly. We're asking a court to put a stop to the unlawful, unprecedented order.' Trump supporters have lined up behind him, with some even offering to head to Los Angeles to help, despite having no law enforcement experience. 'Preparing to deploy … to Los Angeles,' vocal Trump supporter Benny Johnson said on X. He followed up with a post to his 3.7 million followers showing him wearing military-style gear with his name on it. The increasingly contentious political fight over Los Angeles, administration officials admit, is no longer about just deporting those with criminal records, which was Trump's main pitch to voters on the campaign trail. On Monday, an MSNBC host asked Homan whether everyone ICE has arrested as part of the Trump administration's immigration efforts had criminal records, and he had a blunt response. 'Absolutely not,' he said.

Ukraine-Russia war latest: Kyiv ‘damages more fighter jets in nighttime raid' after success of Operation Spiderweb
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Kyiv ‘damages more fighter jets in nighttime raid' after success of Operation Spiderweb

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Ukraine-Russia war latest: Kyiv ‘damages more fighter jets in nighttime raid' after success of Operation Spiderweb

Ukraine 's military claims to have struck two fighter jets stationed at an airfield 400 miles into Russian territory, just days after launching its audacious Operation Spiderweb. Kyiv did not say how the planes were hit in the fresh attack by Ukrainian special operations forces on the Savasleyka airfield, and there was no immediate comment from Russia. However, Russian war bloggers claimed there had been no damage to the warplanes. It will cause further concern for Vladimir Putin after Ukraine destroyed swathes of his bomber fleet last month in a long-planned drone attack on Russian airbases. The latest strike came as Ukraine welcomed home another group of prisoners from Russian captivity, in an exchange agreed last week in Istanbul and set to continue over the coming days. Warning that 'negotiations continue virtually every day', Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said: 'We are doing everything possible to bring back every single person.' The rare exchange follows Russia 's largest overnight drone bombardment of the war so far, with Ukrainian air forces reporting 479 drones and 20 missiles of various types were fired at different parts of the country.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store