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2 Kommentare
(Submission Statement)
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When Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the White House in February last year, there was optimism that the personal rapport between the two leaders would help smooth relations and strengthen cooperation between the world’s largest democracies. But that camaraderie was short-lived.
Few nations have borne the brunt of America’s tariff war like India has, which has been subjected to 50% total tariffs. Trump has also imposed significant restrictions on visa programs that provided opportunities for Indian professionals to work and settle in the United States.
Former Indian ambassador to the US Meera Shankar has opined that Trump’s tough rhetoric is less about New Delhi and more about appeasing domestic voters ahead of the US midterm elections later this year. Having reached a truce with China, Trump needed a large, visible country with less leverage that he could make an example of, and India became the target.
Complicating matters further is the Trump administration’s stance of treating China only as a trade rival rather than a strategic one, which has led them to essentially send out the message that they don’t need India.
These tensions have prompted debate among some analysts about „de-Americanisation“, including whether India could pursue practical cooperation with China to offset economic shocks from Washington.
I’m of the opinion that India’s foreign policy establishment is still living in denial with their optimism about a return to normalcy in US-India ties.
– On the economic front, Trump has already exempted all Indian exports that America currently needs from the tariffs(namely pharmaceuticals, electronics and services) and as such is unlikely to lower said tariffs unless India is willing to pledge hundreds of billions of dollars of investments in America like other Asian economies have been forced to do. Which will never happen.
– On the strategic front, Trump’s new ambassador has indirectly admitted that there will be no more Quad summits(after the 2025 one was quietly cancelled) by suggesting that Trump „may“ visit India in 2027 or 2028. It’s also unlikely that India will ever buy any major US defence systems going forward because of the constant fluctuation of American policy direction towards India which can reverse every time there is a change of President or a major international issue that the two countries disagree on.
So India should just proceed on the assumption that America is an adversary, just as China is, and reopen talks on trade and border settlements with the latter, and also move ahead on defence and energy purchase agreements with Russia that Putin had offered during his visit in December. They should also consider restarting trade with Iran, which they had largely stopped during Trump’s first term due to sanctions.