Key Points

President Trump walked back his earlier statement about "losing India to China" during a White House press conference. He acknowledged his good relationship with Prime Minister Modi while expressing strong disappointment over India's Russian oil imports. The administration threatened significant tariffs and potential restrictions on outsourcing to Indian companies. Meanwhile, India's Finance Minister reaffirmed the country's commitment to buying Russian oil based on national economic interests.

Key Points: Trump Backtracks Lost India Comment Affirms Modi Rapport

  • Trump clarifies earlier "lost India" comment while maintaining Modi rapport
  • Expresses strong disappointment over India's Russian oil purchases
  • Threatens 50% tariff on India over energy policy
  • White House advisors escalate rhetoric against Indian trade practices
3 min read

Trump softens 'lost India' comment, affirms rapport with PM Modi

Trump softens "lost India to China" remark, affirms good relations with PM Modi but expresses strong disappointment over India's Russian oil purchases and threatens tariffs.

"I don't think we have. - Donald Trump on losing India to China"

Washington, Sep 6

US President Donald Trump has appeared to backtrack from his previous remark about "losing" India to China.

At a White House press conference on Friday, Trump was asked about his comment on whether he blamed anyone for "losing India to China".

He responded, "I don't think we have."

He added that he gets "along very well" with Prime Minister Modi but was "very disappointed" with India over New Delhi's purchase of Russian oil.

"I've been very disappointed that India would be buying so much oil, as you know, from Russia, and let them know that we put a very big tariff on India, 50 per cent tariff, very hot tariff," he noted.

Earlier on Friday, Trump posted a picture of PM Modi along with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying that India and Russia seem to have been "lost" to China.

"Looks like we've lost India and Russia to deepest, darkest, China. May they have a long and prosperous future together!," he wrote on his social media platform 'Truth Social'.

The remarks follow a wave of intensified rhetoric against India from his administration and supporters.

White House Advisor Peter Navarro also repeated his accusations on Friday, alleging in a post on X that India's "highest tariffs cost US jobs".

Trump's aide Laura Loomer claimed on X that the administration is "considering blocking US IT companies from outsourcing their work to Indian companies".

Though she did not offer any evidence to support it.

In an interview with Bloomberg on Friday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the "US is always willing to talk", but appeared to set preconditions for India.

"India doesn't yet want to open their market. Stop buying Russian oil, right? And stop being a part of BRICS, right? They are the vowel between Russia and China. If that's who you want to be, go, be it. But either, support the Dollar, support the United States of America, support your biggest client, who is the American consumer, or I guess you're going to pay a 50 per cent tariff. And let's see how long this lasts," he added.

He also voiced US opposition to India's rising share of Russian crude in its oil imports, calling it "plain wrong".

On Friday, India's Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman asserted that India will continue to buy Russian oil.

"Where we buy our oil from, especially a big-ticket foreign exchange item where we pay so much, highest in terms of import, we will have to take a call on what suits us best."

"We will undoubtedly be buying," she said in an interview to a Indian media channel.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Trump's flip-flopping shows how unreliable American foreign policy can be. One day we're "lost", next day we're friends. India should maintain strategic autonomy and not bow to pressure from any country.
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Arjun K
The 50% tariff threat is just empty rhetoric. American consumers will end up paying more if they impose such tariffs. Our IT sector and manufacturing are too valuable to their economy.
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Sarah B
While I understand India's position on Russian oil, we must also consider the broader geopolitical implications. Perhaps a more balanced approach would serve our long-term interests better with Western allies.
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Vikram M
"Lost to China"? What nonsense! India has its own foreign policy and doesn't belong to anyone. We make decisions based on our national interest, not to please other countries. Well said, FM Sitharaman! 👏
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Michael C
As someone working in the IT sector, these outsourcing threats worry me. But I trust our diplomats to handle this sensibly. The US-India relationship is too important for both countries to be damaged by rhetoric.
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Ananya R
Why is the US always trying to bully other countries? First they want us to stop buying Russian oil, then leave BRICS, then support dollar supremacy. India is not anyone's puppet! Time for multipolar world order.

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