Trump Vows India-US Trade Deal Unchanged, Calls Modi "Great Gentleman"

US President Donald Trump has stated that the trade framework with India will remain intact despite a recent Supreme Court ruling. He emphasized that "nothing changes" regarding the deal, which he described as now being "fair" with India paying tariffs to the US. Trump praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a "great gentleman" and said his relationship with India is fantastic. The comments came during a news conference where Trump also discussed the broader implications of presidential authority on trade.

Key Points: Trump: India-US Trade Deal Intact, Modi a "Great Gentleman"

  • Trump affirms India-US trade deal intact
  • Calls PM Modi a "great gentleman"
  • Highlights reversal of tariff payments
  • Comments on US-India relationship
3 min read

'Nothing changes': Trump says India-US trade deal to remain intact, calls PM Modi a 'great gentleman'

US President Donald Trump says the India-US trade framework remains unchanged, calls PM Narendra Modi a "great gentleman" and discusses tariffs.

"Nothing changes, nothing changes, they'll be paying tariffs, and we will not be paying tariffs. - Donald Trump"

Washington, Feb 21

US President Donald Trump has said that a trade framework with India would remain intact despite a Supreme Court ruling that struck down his use of a particular tariff authority, insisting, "Nothing changes" for the India trade deal and describing Prime Minister Narendra Modi as "a great gentleman, a great man actually".

Asked at a news conference on Friday afternoon about "the framework which is to be signed with India sometime soon", Trump replied: "Nothing changes, nothing changes, they'll be paying tariffs, and we will not be paying tariffs."

The US President added, "Our deal with India is that they pay tariffs. This is a reversal from what it used to be. As you know, India, and I think Prime Minister Modi is a great gentleman, a great man actually, but he was much smarter than the people that he was against in terms of the United States."

He said the arrangement had been altered, portraying it as a shift in leverage.

"We made a deal with India, and it's a fair deal now, and we are not paying tariffs to them, and they are paying tariffs. We did a little flip," Trump said.

Trump was also asked whether he planned to travel to India for the upcoming Quad Summit and how he viewed the relationship between India and the US.

"I think my relationship with India is fantastic, and we're doing trade with India," he said.

Withstanding Trump's repeated assertions of tariffs and India-Pakistan war, India has already made it clear that there is no link between the two.

New Delhi has reiterated that the India-Pakistan war came to an end at the request of Pakistan, as the latter lost a major part of its assets, adding that the trade deal with the US is the result of a year-long negotiation.

While the news conference by the US President focused largely on the Supreme Court ruling on tariffs, Trump returned repeatedly to the view that trade tools give him leverage abroad.

"This was an important case to me more as a symbol of economic and national security," the US President said earlier.

He also suggested the post-ruling landscape would not weaken his negotiating posture.

"All the deals are just -- we're just going to do it a different way," Trump said, after insisting the US administration had "great alternatives".

The Supreme Court is the highest court in the US, and its decisions set binding interpretations of federal law and Presidential authority.

In trade disputes, the US Supreme Court's rulings can shape how far a President may go without new action from the Congress.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The framing of "they pay tariffs, we don't" is a bit simplistic for public consumption, isn't it? Trade is never that one-sided. I hope our negotiators secured real benefits for Indian industries and jobs, not just political optics.
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Vikram M
Trump calling Modi a "great gentleman" is nice, but words are cheap. What matters is the actual text of the deal and whether it protects our farmers and MSMEs. The proof will be in the pudding.
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Priyanka N
It's a relief that the deal remains intact despite the US court ruling. Stability in international agreements is so important for business planning and foreign investment. Jai Hind!
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Rahul R
With all respect, I'm a bit concerned. The article says Trump portrays it as India paying tariffs and US not. If that's truly the case, what did we gain? We must ensure it's a win-win, not a loss for our exporters.
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Michael C
The strategic partnership is bigger than any single trade term. The Quad summit is the real prize here. Countering China's influence in the Indo-Pacific with strong US-India ties is the long game.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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