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'What did Namaste Trump... really yield for India': Priyank Kharge slams PM Modi over 25% US tariffs

'What did Namaste Trump... really yield for India': Priyank Kharge slams PM Modi over 25% US tariffs

Deccan Herald3 days ago
Kharge said the US has imposed penalties for buying Russian oil and military equipment, undermining India's strategic autonomy.
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EAM Dr S Jaishankar, NSA Doval plan trips to Russia this month
EAM Dr S Jaishankar, NSA Doval plan trips to Russia this month

Time of India

time24 minutes ago

  • Time of India

EAM Dr S Jaishankar, NSA Doval plan trips to Russia this month

India is reinforcing its longstanding relationship with Russia, planning high-level visits to Moscow despite pressure from the US to reduce oil imports. National Security Advisor Ajit Doval and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will discuss defense collaboration, regional issues, Arctic cooperation, and increased trade. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads New Delhi: India is keeping its ties with Russia steady with high level visits planned to Moscow this month amid US President Donald Trump's demand asking to reduce oil imports from Russia and threatening penalties if New Delhi failed to do Security Adviser Ajit Doval and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar are planning Moscow trips this month, ET has learnt. While Doval could visit Moscow in early part of this month, Jaishankar is planning a trip to Russia mid-August, it has been further defence industry collaboration besides regional situation will be big on the agenda when Doval meets his Russian counterpart, according to persons familiar with the are reports that India is looking to purchase additional S-400 defence systems which had contributed to India's success during Operation Sindoor. India also plans to have MRO facilities for S-400 here. There are also unconfirmed reports that India is exploring purchase of Su-57 fighter jets from in the resource rich Arctic region and increasing Indian exports to Russia will figure high on the agenda when Jaishankar meets his counterpart Sergey Lavrov besides First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Friday while defending ties with Russia MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, "India and Russia have a steady and time-tested partnership." "Our bilateral relationships with various countries stand on their own merit and should not be seen from the prism of a third country."India will host the next edition of the annual India-Russia summit this year that will enable President Vladimir Putin to travel to New Delhi for the first time since industry ties, energy ties in the backdrop of recent EU sanctions, civil nuclear partnership, Arctic cooperation besides joint roadmap for cooperation in the high-tech sector will be on the agenda of the Summit, ET had reported last monthFood security could also be on the agenda of the Summit. Putin recently mentioned following Modi's direct request, Russia increased exports of fertilisers to other issues, Russia wants India to increase its presence in a big way in the resource rich Arctic region and earmark a second site for the nuclear power plant even as it has established its presence in the Small Modular Reactor workforce is increasing in the Russian construction and textile sector and a formal agreement on manpower could be inked during the summit.

Need To support Negotiators On US Tariff Talks: Shashi Tharoor
Need To support Negotiators On US Tariff Talks: Shashi Tharoor

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

Need To support Negotiators On US Tariff Talks: Shashi Tharoor

Amid turbulence triggered by US tariff hikes, Congress MP and former diplomat Shashi Tharoor said on Saturday that it is time to support our negotiators to bring us a good result by protecting national interests and showing some flexibility. Speaking at the sidelines of the launch of his book 'Our Living Constitution', the former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations said, 'We need to preserve an export market in America. But we should also be talking to other countries and regions where we are exporting.' He said that with talks with the EU and Japan and with the help of the trade agreement with the UK, the country can make up, to some degree, what we may end up losing in the US. Cautioning against losing out on the export market in the US, he said, 'We can't lose everything. We have to preserve some things. To my mind, this is the task for which we have to support our negotiators to bring us a good result.' Refusing to react to party leader Rahul Gandhi's criticism of the government over US trade talks, the MP from Thiruvananthapuram said, 'My concern is that this relationship with the US, as a strategic partnership and as an economic relationship, is important for us.' 'We are exporting something like $90 billion worth of goods to America. We can't, therefore, be in a position where we are going to lose that,' he said. Some people say that it is just 0.2 per cent of our GDP, but in terms of the percentage of exports, America is one of our largest markets, he said. Urging support for Indian negotiators, Tharoor said, 'We must wish our negotiators strength and courage in working out a fair deal for India… in negotiation, you give some, you take some. There's got to be some flexibility we need to show.' 'At the same time, some questions of national interest cannot cross,' he said. Earlier this week, Trump announced 25 per cent reciprocal tariffs on Indian goods. He said India would also face an additional tariff penalty for buying Russian oil. On Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaffirmed the resilience of the Indian economy amid turbulence triggered by US tariff hikes, saying that the country must remain vigilant about its economic interests and adopt 'swadeshi' products. According to PM Modi, the government is doing everything it can in the best interest of the country. On Friday, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said that India and the US share a comprehensive global strategic partnership anchored in shared interests, democratic values, and robust people-to-people ties, with the partnership having weathered several transitions and challenges.

Short-term hiccups, long-term rewards
Short-term hiccups, long-term rewards

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Short-term hiccups, long-term rewards

That this is not a good week for India-US relations is an understatement. With 25% tariffs, threat of a 'penalty' for purchasing oil and military equipment from Russia, criticism for being a part of the Brics grouping, and sermons over an apparently 'dead economy' and 'obnoxious non-monetary trade barriers,' US President Donald Trump has made clear that India, who he still calls a 'friend', is high on his imagination. His irritation might even be personal. It's difficult to say. The conclusion of what appears to be a last-minute trade agreement with Pakistan, still with 19% tariffs, and a plan — the details of which are best known to the President — to develop untapped and 'massive oil reserves' within Pakistan is striking, if not mystifying to global oil experts. Understandably, within India, anger has dimmed the vision for promise in a relationship that has transformed in the past two decades. Well known television anchors have selflessly advised the government to 'draw a line' because, apparently, 'Trump always chickens-out'. Given that the Indian Parliament is in session, news channels have one sound bite after another on this crucial relationship, the state of the Indian economy, and much else. Friends in Washington D.C. who have spent a lifetime building trust between the two countries are appalled. 'What is lost,' argues Evan Feigenbaum, a former US official who played a key role in getting the US-India civil nuclear agreement across the line, 'is trust that took 25 years of painstaking, hard, bipartisan work and a huge lift by advocates in both countries'. Trust, the former official argues, is 'hard to build, easy to lose'. To be sure, within India, those who have remained sceptical, to put it mildly, of deepening US-India ties find themselves back in the limelight. Russian social media handles are electrified. 'We stand with India' are lines being circulated on WhatsApp groups and through unattributable handles. There is little doubt that in some office corner in China, a disinformation campaign is on the loose. Yet, whilst fully acknowledging the complexities woven into these difficult days for Indian and American interlocutors who have battled hard for a better future, this is neither the time for India to engage in grammar wars — this can be left to anchors and pundits alike — or, in fact, give-up on the functional aspects of the relationship. Understandably, there will be an impulse to pause ties across the board. Politically, it might be prudent too. But this is the time to demonstrate a version of altruism keeping the future in mind. For US experts, the term altruism refers to some strange conceptualisation of benevolence. Supporting India without asking for something in return, they would argue, was the spirit that drove American officials to go out of their way to accommodate India's civil nuclear ambitions. Currently, the verve is to turn altruism on its head, and for India to give more than it gets — to get past Trump 2.0. Many in India will disagree with this conceptualisation. I do. But that's another matter altogether. What is needed is an altruism not to react to a President who may well be negotiating for a better day or determinately pushing India where it hurts. He may hit India with 30% tariffs next week. His negotiators and their counterparts within India, who in all likelihood had agreed on terms for the first tranche of the trade deal, may still prevail. It is impossible to tell. What is clear is that no one in the US, including those within the White House can second guess Trump's next move or tweet. What is required is for India to be lingually altruistic to a President, who only in part controls the temperature and shapes the trajectory of a relationship that has proliferated well beyond government ties. This is the real success of the US-India relationship: The creation of a wide and spirited ecosystem that is fusing ties that go well beyond the government and foreign military sales. This is not to say that the drum that beats within the White House is not important. It is not necessarily all-important. The trust that has been built may not, in fact, be that easy to lose. Neither can it be taken for granted any longer. But this will require persistent engagement at the functional level and within this broader ecosystem. There are some 1,500 American Global Capabilities Centres peppered across India. Cutting-edge American defence platforms are being assembled in Hyderabad. Every major American technology firm has deep investments in India. This number is only growing. India's space companies service contracts for the US Space Force. The lists of these intersections are almost countless. For India's own economic and technological growth, a good part of the future lies with the US beyond Trump. This, of course, does not mean taking the bait for geopolitical realignments, which the government seems firm on. And rightly so. In fact, in a couple of months, the US may even strike an agreement with Russia, turning the tide on the current pressure on oil sales. If the Quad summit takes place in October or November, there is still an opportunity to functionally streamline and add substance to the myriad of working groups from cyber and infrastructure to space and critical and emerging technologies. AI infrastructure deals are unlikely, as of this moment, to stop in their tracks. India will host the Global AI Impact Summit in February 2026. Every technology company in the world wants to be involved, and all American firms want to send their top brass to Delhi. This is an opportunity to further deepen an already invested ecosystem. In sum, there is no doubt that India is in a tight spot. But not an impossible one. As of this moment, there is nothing to suggest that all is lost. It is not. Yet, at the functional level from government to industry and from technology to investment portfolios, there is a need to engage — for the sake of a relationship that has the space and dexterity, at least for a little time, to bridge ties beyond normalcy. Notwithstanding all the noise on the television channels and in Parliament, it is in India's interest to be linguistically altruistic for the sake of a relationship that has the space and dexterity, at least for some time, to bridge ties beyond immediacy. Rudra Chaudhuri is director, Carnegie India. The views expressed are personal.

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