US Embassy Highlights Rubio’s Vision for Strong India-US Ties

The US Embassy in India shared Marco Rubio’s remarks on the significance of India-US ties, highlighting cooperation in defence, energy, critical minerals, and the Quad. An Indian trade delegation recently visited Washington for constructive talks on the proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement. Discussions covered market access, non-tariff measures, customs, and digital trade, with both sides agreeing to maintain momentum. The talks follow a February 2026 joint statement outlining a framework for an interim trade agreement.

Key Points: Rubio on India-US Ties: Defence, Energy, Quad Cooperation

  • US Embassy shares Marco Rubio’s Republic Day statement
  • Partnership covers defence, energy, critical minerals, Quad
  • India-US hold constructive Bilateral Trade Agreement talks
  • Delegation visits Washington for market access, digital trade discussions
2 min read

US Embassy shares Rubio's remarks on significance of India-US ties

US Embassy shares Marco Rubio’s remarks on India-US partnership spanning defence, energy, critical minerals, and Quad, as trade delegation talks advance in Washington.

"From our close cooperation on defense, energy, critical minerals, and emerging technologies... the U.S.-India relationship delivers real results for our two countries and for the Indo-Pacific region. - Marco Rubio"

New Delhi, April 30

The US Embassy in India on Thursday shared a picture of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and recalled Rubio's words that the India-US partnership spanning vast areas such as defence, energy and critical minerals and engagement through Quad delivers for the two countries and the Indo-Pacific region.

"Throwback Thursdays- Reflecting on a powerful moment of shared vision and collaboration. "From our close cooperation on defense, energy, critical minerals, and emerging technologies to our multi-layered engagement through the Quad, the U.S.-India relationship delivers real results for our two countries and for the Indo-Pacific region." - U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's Statement on India's Republic Day January 26, 2026," the US Embassy in India said in a post on X.

Earlier this month, India and United States held constructive and forward-looking discussions on the proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).

An Indian trade delegation had visited Washington DC from April 20 to April 23.

The Commerce and Industry Ministry said in a release that the meetings were held in a positive and constructive spirit with both sides engaging in meaningful discussions across a wide range of areas.

These included market access, non-tariff measures, technical barriers to trade, customs and trade facilitation, investment promotion, economic security alignment, and digital trade.

The release said discussions enabled progress on several key matters, and both sides agreed to remain engaged to maintain the momentum as negotiations move forward.

"The meetings were conducted in a constructive and positive spirit with meaningful and forward-looking discussions enabling progress on key matters. Both sides agreed to remain engaged to maintain this momentum as they move forward," the release said.

The visit follows a Joint Statement issued by India and the United States on February 7, 2026, in which both countries agreed on a framework for an Interim Agreement aimed at reciprocal and mutually beneficial trade.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally some mature diplomacy. After all the F-16 and CAATSA tensions, it's good to see both sides focusing on critical minerals and tech. Hope the BTA doesn't become another RCEP-style disappointment for Indian industry though. 🤞
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Rohit L
Nice photo op, but what about H1B visa issues? Our IT professionals still face uncertainty. Rubio's words are welcome, but actions matter more. If the US wants deep defence ties, they should ease movement of skilled Indians. Just saying. 🤷‍♂️
S
Suresh O
"Throwback Thursday" for a January statement? Anyway, the Quad is important given China's assertiveness. But we must also maintain independent foreign policy. Not a US camp follower. The trade talks seem promising if both sides are serious about reciprocity.
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Deepak U
Great to see India-US relations deepening. But let's not forget - the US slapped tariffs on Indian steel just last year. This partnership needs to be truly two-way. Also, why no mention of climate tech? That's where real innovation can happen. 🌏
K
Kavya N
Thoda pragmatic ho jao guys. The US needs India as a counterweight to China, and we need tech and investment. This BTA can be win-win if our negotiators push hard on generic drugs and IT services access. Time to play smart like Singapore does.

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