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UAE President, VPs congratulate President of Pakistan on Independence Day

UAE President, VPs congratulate President of Pakistan on Independence Day

Al Etihada day ago
14 Aug 2025 09:10
ABU DHABI (WAM) President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has sent a message of congratulations to President Asif Ali Zardari of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan on the occasion of his country's Independence Day.
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, and His Highness Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Presidential Court, dispatched similar messages to President Zardari and Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif on the occasion.
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By R. Suryamurthy When Prime Minister Narendra Modi ascends the Red Fort on August 15 to deliver his Independence Day address, the nation will be listening for the usual rhetoric of progress, resilience, and pride. This year, the subtext must be different. With a possible face-off with U.S. President Donald Trump looming at next month's United Nations General Assembly, Modi cannot afford to leave his stance on the ongoing trade standoff to diplomatic guesswork. This is not just another bilateral. It's a moment that could decide whether India's agricultural and dairy sectors — the backbone of rural livelihoods — remain intact or get bartered away in a high-pressure negotiation for tariff relief. The country deserves clarity before the Prime Minister shakes Trump's hand in New York. Trump's decision to double duties on Indian goods to 50% is not an abstract policy tweak; it's an act of economic coercion. Ostensibly punishment for India's purchases of Russian oil, the measure has placed India in the same punitive bracket as Brazil and well above China's 30% rate — despite Beijing importing far more Russian crude. The tariff hikes, effective August 27, hit India's strongest export sectors where competitive margins are already slim: Knitted apparel ($2.7B, 63.9% total tariff) and woven apparel ($2.7B, 60.3% duty) are effectively priced out against Bangladesh and Vietnam. Home textiles ($3B, 59% duty) could see Pakistan capture long-term contracts. Jewellery and diamonds ($10B, 52.1% duty) face survival challenges. Shrimps ($2B) will be decimated by the combined blow of 50% duty and anti-dumping measures. Organic chemicals, carpets, and machinery — over $10B combined — will lose ground to lower-tariff suppliers like Ireland, Turkey, and Mexico. This isn't a tariff adjustment. 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By drawing an unambiguous red line there, Modi would strip Trump of the ability to claim — falsely or otherwise — that India has signalled flexibility behind closed doors. Trump's recent 'trade victories' with Indonesia and Vietnam show the danger. Both deals were announced personally by Trump, bypassing formal texts. Both were later disputed by the partner governments. If the U.S. President declares from the UNGA podium that Modi has agreed to open dairy and farm markets, the global narrative will harden instantly — unless India can point back to a prior public commitment that says otherwise. As Ajay Srivastava of the Global Trade Research Initiative puts it: 'If India doesn't immediately deny a false claim, the optics can lock it into a one-sided arrangement. A clear, written, and jointly signed text is the only safeguard.' The U.S. double standard vis-à-vis China is glaring. 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That is why August 15 must be more than a patriotic ritual. The Red Fort address should contain a line that is as much for Washington's ears as for India's heartland: India will not barter away its farmers for any trade deal. Such a declaration would do three things: Set the baseline for any negotiation at UNGA. Reassure domestic constituencies that their livelihoods are non-negotiable. Neutralise the misrepresentation risk, making it politically costly for Trump to spin a false narrative. Without this, India's position will be whatever the U.S. claims it to be — until New Delhi scrambles to correct the record. By then, the political and market damage may already be done. The tariff hikes are not just about trade balances; they are leverage tools designed to crack open markets the U.S. has long coveted. In that sense, the UNGA bilateral is not a diplomatic courtesy — it is a test of whether India can resist economic coercion when the cost of resistance is immediate and painful. Modi's August 15 speech offers him a unique tactical advantage: the chance to declare his negotiating red lines in full public view, on a platform that carries moral and political weight. If he wastes it on platitudes and avoids the specifics, he will walk into New York on the defensive, with the U.S. defining the terms. The stakes are clear. Trump's 50% tariff is not a policy dispute; it's a bargaining chip to prise open India's most politically sensitive sectors. The only question now is whether Modi will call it out — and lock his position in stone — before stepping into the UNGA arena. If he fails to do so, the fate of India's farmers may well be decided not in the fields of Gujarat or Punjab, but in a backroom at the United Nations. And the Red Fort will have been a missed chance to defend them before the fight even began. (IPA Service)

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