MEA Hasn't Seen Trump's "Destroy Modi Career" Video, Will Act If Needed

The Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson, Randhir Jaiswal, stated he has not seen a resurfaced video where former US President Donald Trump discusses Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Jaiswal clarified that if such a video exists, appropriate action will be taken after verifying its authenticity. In the purported clip, Trump praises Modi as "a great man" while making a cautious remark about not wanting to "destroy his political career." Separately, Jaiswal affirmed that the India-US joint statement on an interim trade agreement remains the foundational framework for bilateral understanding.

Key Points: MEA on Trump's Modi Video: "Have Not Seen It"

  • MEA spokesperson hasn't viewed Trump video
  • Will take action if video is verified
  • Trump in clip called Modi "a great man"
  • India-US trade framework basis of mutual understanding
3 min read

Not seen video, says MEA on Trump's purported destroy Modi career video

MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal addresses questions on a resurfaced video where Donald Trump discusses PM Modi, clarifying India's stance and bilateral ties.

"I have not seen the video. But if indeed there is such a video, whether it is true or false, we will take appropriate action on it. - Randhir Jaiswal"

New Delhi, February 13

The Ministry of External Affairs's Official Spokesperson for Randhir Jaiswal addressed questions about a video in which U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly said he "doesn't want to destroy Modi's political career."

Jaiswal, during his weekly press briefing on Thursday, clarified that he had not seen the video in question.

When asked about Trump's remarks, Jaiswal responded, "I have not seen the video. But if indeed there is such a video, whether it is true or false, we will take appropriate action on it."

The spokesperson's statement came in light of a resurfaced clip from Trump's press conference with the Director of the FBI, where he is praising PM Modi, saying that "Modi is a great man, that he loves Trump." He clarified the cautious interpretation of the word "love" and asked, "not to take that any different."

"He's a great man. Modi is a great man, that he loves Trump. Now, I don't know if the word love, I don't want you to take that any different. I don't want to destroy his political career, but you have to understand, I've watched India for years. My friend has been there now for a long time," Trump had said in the video.

Further on the trade and bilateral relations with Russia, Jaiswal said, "Russia-India have ongoing engagement and cooperation across a range of issues - from trade to people-to-people cultural interaction, defence engagement and all those ties. All those aspects of our bilateral relations will continue to grow."

Meanwhile, responding to the US factsheet, he clarified that the recent amendments made in the United States factsheet on the framework for the India-US interim trade agreement reflect the "shared understandings" on the matter between the two countries.

Jaiswal, when asked about changes made in the White House factsheet on the deal, said that the joint statement on the framework for the interim agreement remains the basis of mutual understanding between the two sides.

"As you are aware, the India-US Joint Statement on the framework for an Interim Agreement on reciprocal and mutually beneficial trade was issued on 7 February 2026. The Joint Statement is the framework and remains the basis of our mutual understanding in the matter. Both sides will now work towards implementing this framework and finalising the Interim Agreement," Jaiswal said.

"The amendments in the US fact sheet reflect the shared understandings contained in the Joint Statement," he added.

The clarification comes amid reports highlighting revisions in the US document, which earlier had contrasted with the statement released by the Indian side.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Why is this even news? Trump says so many things. The important part is the trade agreement and our relationship with Russia. Jaiswal handled it well by steering the conversation back to substantive issues like bilateral ties.
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Aman W
Honestly, the phrasing "I don't want to destroy his political career" is a bit odd and arrogant, no matter who says it. India's leadership isn't dependent on validation from foreign leaders. Our PM's career is decided by Indian voters, period.
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Sarah B
As someone following US politics, this is classic Trump. He praises someone and then adds a backhanded comment. The MEA's cautious "wait and see" approach is smart. Don't get drawn into the drama.
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Vikram M
Good to see the clarification on the trade agreement factsheet. These details matter more for our economy than any viral video. Let's focus on the actual policies and agreements, not the noise.
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Karthik V
The statement on continuing strong ties with Russia is crucial. India must maintain its strategic autonomy. Our foreign policy has to work in our national interest, whether it's with the US, Russia, or anyone else. Well said, MEA.

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