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Updated Jun 5, 2026 · 00:46
India News Updated Jun 5, 2026

US-India Trade Talks Begin in Delhi: Bilateral Agreement on Horizon

A US trade delegation led by the Chief Negotiator visited India from June 1-4 to advance bilateral trade agreement talks. Discussions focused on trade in goods, non-tariff measures, customs, and economic security alignment. Ambassador Sergio Gor met with Anand Mahindra to discuss Mahindra Group investments in the US. Major US companies including Amazon, Microsoft, and Google have announced significant investments in India.

Visit of delegation from US for discussions on Bilateral Trade Agreement between India and United States from June 1-4 in Delhi

New Delhi, June 5

India and the United States issued a joint statement on 7th February 2026, agreeing on a framework for an Interim Agreement regarding reciprocal and mutually beneficial trade.

According to the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, the framework reaffirmed the countries' commitment to the broader India-U.S. Bilateral Trade Agreement negotiations. A delegation from the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), led by the Chief Negotiator, visited India from 1-4 June 2026 to advance discussions on the Trade Agreement.

During the visit, the teams held constructive and positive discussions across a wide range of issues covering Trade in Goods, Non-Tariff Measures, Customs and Trade Facilitation, Economic Security Alignment and other areas of mutual interest.

The engagements were marked by a spirit of cooperation and pragmatism, with both sides reaffirming their commitment to concluding a mutually beneficial agreement that strengthens bilateral trade and economic ties.

Meanwhile, Ambassador Sergio Gor held discussions with Anand Mahindra on investments by the Mahindra Group in the United States.

He underlined that the talks featured areas such as generating jobs and building resilient supply chains.

In a post on X, Gor said, "Very much enjoyed visiting with @anandmahindra, the chairman of @MahindraRise, learning about their investments in the United States that are strengthening American manufacturing, generating jobs, and building resilient supply chains."

Earlier in Mumbai, Gor said that the partnership between India and the United States is "the most consequential global partnership of the century" and noted that what the two nations accomplish together will shape the future.

The US Ambassador said that in addition to government-to-government engagement, the US private sector has made significant commitments in India.

"That is the win-win situation that we identify. Amazon plans to invest US$ 35 billion into India by 2030 to advance AI-driven digitalisation. Microsoft has announced a US$17.5 billion investment. Google announced a US$15 billion AI hub in India," he said.

"Just last week we officially signed the Critical Minerals Framework with India. It is a massive milestone which will help ensure the foundational elements required for advanced technology and energy are available within trusted networks. Together, we will take efforts to protect supply chains from coercive market practices and reduce collective vulnerability to single-source monopolies," he added.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Good progress, but I hope India doesn't compromise on key sectors like agriculture and dairy. Our farmers need protection. Also, the critical minerals framework sounds promising—we need to reduce dependency on China for these resources.

Michael C

As someone doing business between both countries, this is fantastic news. The focus on supply chain resilience is crucial post-pandemic. Anand Mahindra's meeting with Ambassador Gor shows Indian companies are serious about investing in US manufacturing too. Win-win! 🇮🇳🇺🇸

Siddharth J

While this looks good on paper, I hope the negotiations are transparent. Previous trade deals have sometimes favored big corporations over small businesses. Also, the AI investments are exciting but we need strong data protection laws.

Jennifer L

The ambassador is right—this truly is the most consequential partnership of the century. $67.5 billion from US tech giants is unprecedented! But let's ensure Indian IT services and pharma also get better access to US markets. That's where our real strength lies.

Vikram M

Interesting developments, but I'm cautiously optimistic. The critical minerals deal is smart geopolitically—we need to break China's monopoly. However, let's not forget that trade must be truly reciprocal. Hope India's concerns on steel and aluminum tariffs are addressed.

Rahul R

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

Reader Voices

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