Key Points

President Trump pointed to his administration's secondary sanctions on India as evidence of his tough stance against Russia. He argued that these measures have cost Russia hundreds of billions of dollars while criticizing India's trade practices as unfair. Trump revealed that India has offered to eliminate all tariffs in response to US pressure, calling the previous relationship one-sided. Meanwhile, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal confirmed that both countries are negotiating a trade deal expected by November.

Key Points: Trump Defends Russia Stance Citing Secondary Sanctions on India

  • Trump defends Russia policy by highlighting secondary sanctions on India
  • Claims India offered "no tariffs" in response to US trade pressure
  • Criticizes India-US relationship as historically "one-sided" for many years
  • Hints at expanding secondary sanctions to phase two and three
2 min read

Trump cites 'secondary sanctions' on India as proof of tough stance on Russia

Trump cites secondary sanctions on India as proof of tough Russia policy, hints at expanding measures while criticizing India's trade practices and tariffs.

"How do you know there's no action? Would you say that putting secondary sanctions on India... is almost equal? - Donald Trump"

Washington, Sep 3

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday highlighted his “secondary sanctions” on India as proof of its tough stance against Russia.

While speaking to the press alongside Polish President Karol Nawrocki, Trump pushed back against criticism of his inaction on Russia, arguing that his measures against India demonstrated otherwise.

“How do you know there's no action? Would you say that putting secondary sanctions on India, the largest purchaser outside of China, is almost equal? Would you say there was no action that cost hundreds of billions of dollars to Russia? If you remember, two weeks ago, I did, I said, if India buys, India's got big problems, and that's what happened,” he replied.

Trump also hinted at expanding secondary sanctions in future. “I haven't done phase two yet or phase three,” he quipped without clarifying if he would target other big purchasers of Russian oil like China.

The Trump administration has singled out India and slapped an additional tariff of 25 per cent for buying Russian oil and increasing the total levies to 50 per cent, a treatment that India calls “unfair and unjustified.”

Trump, in an interview with Scott Jennings on Tuesday, claimed that New Delhi had offered him “no tariffs in India anymore.”

“They've (India) offered me no tariffs in India anymore. No tariffs. If I didn't have tariffs, they would never make that offer,” he said.

Earlier in a news conference on Tuesday, Trump had also reiterated his complaints against India’s trade practices, calling the India-US relationship “one-sided for many years” and pointing to high tariffs as a barrier to American exports.

“We get along with India very well,” Trump said. “But India, you have to understand, for many years, it was a one-sided relationship,” he added.

Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Tuesday confirmed that India and the US are still negotiating a trade deal and could conclude a “bilateral trade agreement by the fall, November or so.”

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Trump always talks about "one-sided" but never mentions how many American companies benefit from Indian markets and talent. This is just election rhetoric 🤦‍♀️
A
Aditya G
While I understand the need for sanctions on Russia, targeting India specifically feels like bullying. Why not China which buys much more? Typical double standards.
S
Sarah B
As an American living in India, I see both sides. But punishing allies while letting bigger offenders slide doesn't make strategic sense. Hope the trade deal works out.
N
Nikhil C
Our government should stand firm. We've been reliable partners to the US for decades. This tariff war will hurt American businesses too - many depend on Indian imports.
M
Meera T
Honestly, we need to diversify our energy sources anyway. This might push India to invest more in renewable energy and reduce dependence on all foreign oil. Silver lining? 🌞

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