US Senator Hails India Trade Deal as Win for Economy and National Security

U.S. Senator Roger Marshall praised a new trade deal with India, stating it will double American exports of agriculture and oil. He emphasized the national security benefit, arguing it will reduce India's oil purchases from Russia and slow President Putin's "war machine." Marshall framed the agreement as part of President Trump's successful use of tariffs for economic and strategic gain. During the same interview, he also addressed immigration, asserting Republicans hold the political high ground and leverage on enforcement.

Key Points: US-India Deal Boosts Exports, Curbs Russia, Says Senator

  • Deal doubles US agriculture and oil exports to India
  • Reduces India's energy reliance on Russia
  • Part of Trump's tariff-based trade strategy
  • Senator contrasts GOP and Democrat policies
  • Links immigration to economic resources
3 min read

India deal advances US trade, security: Senator

Senator Roger Marshall says the US-India trade agreement will double American agriculture and oil exports while reducing India's reliance on Russian energy.

"The national security benefit here is that India is going to stop buying oil from Russia, and they'll start buying it from America. - Senator Roger Marshall"

Washington, Feb 4

Describing India as central to President Donald Trump's trade strategy, U.S. Senator Roger Marshall said the latest deal with New Delhi will double American agriculture and oil exports, and at the same time serve America's national security by reducing India's reliance on Russian energy.

Marshall, a Republican from Kansas, made the remarks during an appearance on The Evening Edit on Fox Business, where he outlined what he described as the economic and strategic gains flowing from the agreement announced by the Trump administration.

"Well, Liz, what another great day of winning for President Trump and for America," Marshall said during the interview.

"You know, President Trump's the only person, the only president, I've ever seen to take tariffs and use them for economic benefit as well as a national security benefit."

He argued that the India deal delivers a direct geopolitical payoff by reshaping energy trade flows.

"The national security benefit here is that India is going to stop buying oil from Russia, and they'll start buying it from America," Marshall said. "So that's going to slow down Putin's war machine."

Marshall said the agreement would significantly expand U.S. exports to India, especially in sectors critical to rural America.

"Look what this deal is going to do: it's going to double the amount of exports of American agriculture and oil into India," he said. "So that's a great win for all Americans and a great win for President Trump."

He placed the India agreement within a broader pattern of tariff-based trade deals pursued by the Trump administration. "By the way, out of the top 10 countries we trade with, President Trump has now done with all 10 of them some type of a tariff deal," Marshall said.

During the same interview, the senator also addressed immigration, saying Republicans are in a strong position politically and legislatively. "Again, more winning for all of us," he said. "Look, the big picture here is that Republicans have the high ground as well as the leverage."

Marshall drew a sharp contrast between the two parties, saying, "The high ground is that Republicans are the party of law and order, and Democrats are the party of defund the police."

He criticised Democrats over funding decisions related to immigration enforcement, adding, "So here they are defunding ICE again, and it's not a winning issue for them."

He said public opinion favours tougher enforcement measures. "Still, the supermajority of Americans want a secure border, they want their families to be safe, they want-especially-the violent illegal aliens to be exported out of this country as well," Marshall said.

Marshall also warned of broader economic consequences linked to illegal immigration. "From an economic standpoint, don't underestimate the impact of 10 or 20 million people flooding into our country and taking up the housing, as well as all the social resources," he said.

Looking ahead to budget battles, he said Republicans retain leverage through funding decisions already in place. "Again, Republicans hold the leverage going forward in that we have funded ICE in the Working Family Tax Cuts going forward for the next three or four years," Marshall said.

He added, "What you're going to see is the Democrats try to shut down funding for the rest of DHS, and that includes the Coast Guard, FEMA, and TSA."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the US perspective. The senator is framing this entirely as an American "win," which it may be. I hope our negotiators ensured this deal truly benefits Indian farmers and consumers as well, not just US exporters.
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Priya S
Reducing reliance on any single energy source is good for our energy security. But let's be clear, India's foreign policy is independent. We will buy oil from wherever it is most economical and serves our national interest. The deal on agriculture exports needs careful scrutiny for our farmers' sake.
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Rohit P
The US political rhetoric is so divisive. The senator quickly pivoted from trade to bashing the other party and immigration. Our focus should be purely on the economic terms. Does this deal help control inflation in India? That's what matters to the common man.
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Karthik V
Stronger trade ties with the US are always welcome. However, the tone of "slowing down Putin's war machine" makes it sound like India is being used as a pawn in a larger game. We must ensure our strategic autonomy is not compromised. The deal should stand on its own commercial merits.
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Michael C
As an observer, it's fascinating to see how domestic US politics colors everything. The senator is selling this as a Trump victory. For India, the key is whether this brings stable, long-term benefits and technology sharing, not just a political headline for an American election cycle.

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