India-US Trade Talks Resume Tuesday Amid Trump-Modi Friendship Claims

US Ambassador to India Sergio Gor confirmed the next round of India-US trade talks is scheduled for Tuesday, emphasizing the strong personal relationship between President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He announced India's upcoming invitation to join the US-led 'PaxSilica' initiative for securing critical supply chains in technology and semiconductors. The statement clarifies the situation after US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's controversial claim that trade negotiations had stalled. India's Ministry of External Affairs rejected Lutnick's characterization, reaffirming commitment to a mutually beneficial trade deal.

Key Points: India-US Trade Talks Set for Tuesday, Envoy Confirms

  • Trade talks scheduled for Tuesday
  • Ambassador calls Trump-Modi bond real
  • India invited to join 'PaxSilica' initiative
  • MEA rejected earlier claims talks stalled
3 min read

India, US to hold trade talks on Tuesday, Trump-Modi friendship is real: America's envoy

US Ambassador says India-US trade talks continue Tuesday, calls Trump-Modi friendship "real." India invited to join key US-led 'PaxSilica' supply chain group.

India, US to hold trade talks on Tuesday, Trump-Modi friendship is real: America's envoy
"The friendship between Trump and PM Modi is real - US Ambassador Sergio Gor"

New Delhi, Jan 12

India and the US continue to be actively engaged in trade talks and the next meeting between the negotiators of the two countries is scheduled for Tuesday, America's newly-appointed Ambassador to New Delhi, Sergio Gor, said on Monday.

Addressing staffers and journalists as he took charge of the US Embassy here, Gor said that US President Donald Trump conveyed "his best wishes to his friend Prime Minister Narendra Modi."

"The friendship between Trump and PM Modi is real and the US and India are bound not just by shared interests, but by a relationship anchored at the highest levels. Real friends can disagree, but always resolve their differences in the end," Gor remarked.

He also stated that while trade is very important for the India-US ties, the two countries will continue to work closely together on other very important areas, such as security, counter-terrorism, energy, technology, education, and health.

He emphasised that both sides remain in regular contact despite differences over tariffs and market access.

Gor also announced that India will be invited to join 'PaxSilica' as a full member next month. He explained that 'PaxSilica' is a new initiative that the United States launched just last month to build a secure, prosperous, and innovation-driven silicon supply chain from critical minerals and energy inputs to advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, AI development and logistics.

"Nations that joined last month include Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom, and Israel. India's inclusion would further strengthen the group," he added.

Gor's statement on the bilateral trade talks clears much of the confusion created by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's comments that the India-US trade negotiations have stalled because PM Modi "didn't call" President Trump.

The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) rejected Lutnick's statement, saying that "The characterisation of these discussions in the reported remarks is not accurate."

"India remains interested in a mutually beneficial trade deal between two complementary economies and looks forward to concluding it," MEA spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said.

Lutnick had said the trade deal failed after Trump did not receive a call from PM Modi on the issue, adding that Washington moved ahead with other agreements instead.

Jaiswal said, "We have seen the remarks. India and the United States were committed to negotiating a bilateral trade agreement with the US as far back as 13th of February last year. Since then, the two sides have held multiple rounds of negotiations to reach a balanced, mutually beneficial trade agreement."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Friendship is good, but we must ensure any trade deal protects Indian farmers and small businesses. The US often pushes for market access that can hurt our local industries. Let's hope our negotiators are strong.
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Aman W
The comment by the US Commerce Secretary about "didn't call" sounds so childish, yaar. Trade between two major economies shouldn't depend on phone calls. Glad the MEA clarified and the ambassador has set the record straight. Professional diplomacy matters.
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Sarah B
Working in tech, I'm most excited about PaxSilica. Being part of a secure silicon supply chain with Japan, Korea, and Israel is a strategic masterstroke. This is about future-proofing our economy. Jai Hind!
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Vikram M
While the friendship narrative is nice, we should be cautious. The US relationship is transactional. We must get a good deal on tariffs, especially for textiles and engineering goods. "Mutually beneficial" should not be just a slogan.
K
Karthik V
Good to see cooperation on counter-terrorism and security highlighted. That's the bedrock of the relationship. Trade issues will get sorted with time. The strategic partnership is what truly matters for regional stability.

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