HomeWorldTrump's tariff stick for India, carrot for Pak: What’s real, what’s rhetoric and the 'dead economy' myth
Trending Topics

Trump's tariff stick for India, carrot for Pak: What’s real, what’s rhetoric and the 'dead economy' myth

Trump's rhetoric, backed by punitive tariffs, is not just economic coercion but a diplomatic slap that risks undoing years of bipartisan progress in US-India relations.

August 01, 2025 / 17:44 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
File photo of US President Donald Trump shaking hands with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP)
File photo of US President Donald Trump shaking hands with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP)

The India-US relationship is undergoing a seismic shift. Once seen as a pivotal partner in the United States’ Indo-Pacific strategy and a key counterweight to China, India now faces one of the most hostile economic policies ever directed at it by Washington. At the heart of the latest diplomatic rupture is President Donald Trump’s decision to slap 25 per cent tariffs on Indian imports – a rate higher than those levied on several South Asian countries, including Pakistan. If that weren’t enough, Trump has also warned of additional penalties on India over its longstanding oil and defence trade with Russia.

Trump’s recent tirades – calling India a “dead economy”, criticising his trade policies and mocking its ties with Moscow – represent a fundamental departure from previous US administrations that sought to deepen strategic and economic ties with New Delhi. The rhetoric, backed by punitive tariffs, is not just economic coercion but a diplomatic slap that risks undoing years of bipartisan progress in US-India relations.

Story continues below Advertisement

In context of Trump’s actions, India is now being bracketed with Pakistan – a country Trump recently courted with a new oil deal and a warm reception for its Army chief Asim Munir. The optics are impossible to ignore: Trump is rewarding a nation long accused of harbouring terror, while punishing the world’s fastest-growing major economy. But Trump’s rhetoric doesn’t hold up to scrutiny as India’s growth story is far from “dead,” and his economic belligerence may do more harm than good, to both nations.

The decline of ‘friendship’ narrative