US Tariffs Spark India Trust Crisis, Stall Quad Momentum: Senate Report

A report from Democratic members of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee states that steep tariffs imposed by the Trump administration in 2025 severely strained strategic relations with India, creating a "crisis of trust." The six-month standoff, partly over India's Russian oil imports, emboldened voices in India resistant to U.S. cooperation and stalled momentum within the Quad grouping. This diplomatic pause allowed China and Russia to increase their engagement with India, exemplified by high-level meetings and a Modi visit to China. The report warns that such inconsistent U.S. policies risk undermining its Indo-Pacific strategy aimed at balancing China's power.

Key Points: US Tariffs on India Strained Ties, Slowed Quad: Senate

  • 2025 tariffs strained US-India ties
  • Dispute stalled Quad partnership momentum
  • China & Russia deepened India engagement
  • Report warns of inconsistent US policy
3 min read

Steep US tariffs strained ties with India, stalled momentum within Quad: Senate report

A Senate report reveals 2025 US tariffs caused a "crisis of trust" with India, stalled Quad momentum, and allowed China, Russia to gain influence.

"provoked a crisis of trust in the relationship - US Senate Foreign Relations Committee Report"

Washington, March 10

US tariffs imposed on India in 2025 triggered a "crisis of trust" between the two countries and slowed momentum in the Quad partnership, according to a report released by Democratic members of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The report says that steep tariffs introduced by the Donald Trump administration in August 2025 strained relations with India, one of Washington's most important strategic partners in the Indo-Pacific.

"In India, a country with which the past five American Presidents and both parties in Congress have sought to build a lasting strategic partnership, President Trump imposed tariffs... so steep that it provoked a crisis of trust in the relationship," the report said.

The document states that the standoff lasted for six months and was partly driven by tensions over India's continued imports of Russian oil and Washington's efforts to claim credit for mediating the 2025 India-Pakistan conflict.

According to the report, the dispute strengthened political voices within India that have historically opposed closer strategic cooperation with the United States.

"The crisis emboldened the Russia-aligned voices in India that have long resisted meaningful cooperation between the world's two largest democracies," the report said.

The tensions also affected the Quad grouping, which includes the United States, India, Japan, and Australia.

The report said the dispute "stalled momentum" within the Quad and led to the postponement of a planned US-India Leaders' Summit.

This diplomatic pause created opportunities for both China and Russia to deepen engagement with New Delhi.

The report notes that Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on multiple occasions during this period.

It also highlighted PM Modi's visit to China - the first in seven years - as an example of how geopolitical dynamics shifted during the dispute.

The report says such developments demonstrate how tensions between Washington and New Delhi can reshape strategic alignments in Asia.

The Indo-Pacific region is central to global geopolitics, accounting for roughly half the world's population and nearly two-thirds of the global economy, the report notes.

For the United States, maintaining strong partnerships in the region - particularly with India - is considered critical to balancing China's growing economic and military power.

But the Senate report warns that inconsistent policies toward allies risk undermining that strategy.

"Over the past year, tariff policies, termination of foreign assistance programs, and wavering commitments to allies... have called into question America's commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific," the report said.

China, the report adds, has taken advantage of these tensions by increasing military activity in the Taiwan Strait and strengthening economic influence across the region.

The findings come at a time when the United States and India have sought to deepen defence cooperation and technology partnerships while managing differences over trade and Russia policy.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Very disappointing. The Quad had so much potential to be a force for stability in the Indo-Pacific. These unilateral tariffs show a lack of long-term vision from the US side. Partnerships are built on trust, not just transactions.
R
Rohit P
The report is correct. We saw this coming. When you push a friend too hard, they will look for other options. It's basic geopolitics. Modi ji's visit to China was a clear signal. Hope Washington learns from this.
S
Sarah B
As an American living in Delhi, this is frustrating to read. The India-US partnership is crucial for both democracies. Short-sighted trade wars only help Beijing. We need consistent, respectful engagement.
K
Karthik V
While the tariffs were problematic, we must also ask if our foreign policy is too reactive. A strong, independent India should engage with all powers—US, Russia, China—without appearing to swing from one side to another. Our diplomacy needs more finesse.
M
Michael C
The "crisis of trust" phrase hits hard. It takes years to build and minutes to break. The Quad is bigger than any one administration's policies. Hope cooler heads prevail and the momentum is regained soon.

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