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Thursday, February 13, 2025

India, US agree to resolve trade and tariff rows after Trump-Modi talks

India, US agree to resolve trade and tariff rows after Trump-Modi talks

U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi shake hands,at the White House in
Washington, D.C.,U.S., February 13, 2025.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque


WASHINGTON, Feb 13 (Reuters) - India and the U.S. agreed on Thursday to start talks to clinch an early trade deal and resolve their standoff over tariffs as New Delhi promised to buy more U.S. oil, gas and military equipment and fight illegal immigration.

The series of agreements emerged after talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the White House, just hours after Trump railed against the climate for U.S. businesses in India and unveiled a roadmap for reciprocal tariffs on countries that put duties on U.S. imports.

Trump calls India tariffs 'unfair', limits access to U.S.
India, U.S. set for early trade talks
Initial segments of trade deal to be negotiated by fall 2025
India to raise U.S. energy purchases to $25 bln from $15 bln
Two countries agree to aggressively address illegal immigration
"Prime Minister Modi recently announced the reductions to India's unfair, very strong tariffs that limit us access to the Indian market, very strongly," Trump said. "And really it's a big problem I must say."

The deal to resolve trade concerns could be done within the next seven months, said India's Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri.

A joint statement after the meeting said Washington welcomed New Delhi's recent steps to lower tariffs on select U.S. products and increase market access to U.S. farm products, while seeking to negotiate the initial segments of a trade deal by the fall of 2025.

While both leaders "had their perspectives" on tariffs, "what is more remarkable...is the fact that we have a way forward on this issue," Misri said.

Some of the leaders' agreements are aspirational: India wants to increase by "billions of dollars" its purchases of U.S. defense equipment and may make Washington the "number one supplier" of oil and gas, Trump said at a joint press conference with Modi.

And Delhi wants to double trade with Washington by 2030, Modi said. Long-planned cooperation on nuclear energy, also discussed by the leaders, faces ongoing legal challenges.

"We're also paving the way to ultimately provide India with the F-35 stealth fighters," said Trump.

Misri, the Indian official, later said the F-35 deal was a proposal at this point, with no formal process underway. The White House did not respond to a request for comment on any deal.

WHAT TRUMP WANTS

Although Trump had a warm relationship with Modi in his first term, he again said on Thursday that India's tariffs were "very high" and promised to match them, even after his earlier levies on steel and aluminum hit metal-producing India particularly hard.

"We are being reciprocal with India," Trump said during the press conference. "Whatever India charges, we charge them."

Elon Musk meets Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 13, 2025, in this picture obtained from social media.@narendramodi via X/via REUTERS

Modi vowed to protect India's interests.

"One thing that I deeply appreciate, and I learn from President Trump, is that he keeps the national interest supreme," Modi said. "Like him, I also keep the national interest of India at the top of everything else."

The two leaders praised each other and agreed to deepen security cooperation in the Indo-Pacific, a thinly veiled reference to competition with China, as well as to start joint production on technologies like artificial intelligence.

Asked before the meeting about the steps India was taking, one source described it as a "gift" for Trump designed to lower trade tensions. A Trump aide said that the president sees defense and energy sales to India lowering the U.S. trade deficit.

India's energy purchases from the U.S. could go up to $25 billion in the near future from $15 billion last year, India's Misri said, adding that this could contribute to reducing the trade deficit.

Tariffs will continue to dominate the two countries' relationship, said Richard Rossow, head of the India program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank.

"It's going to be a boxing match," he said. "India is willing to take a few hits, but there's a limit."

The U.S. has a $45.6 billion trade deficit with India. Overall, the U.S. trade-weighted average tariff rate has been about 2.2%, according to World Trade Organization data, compared with India's 12%.

New Delhi promised to buy more U.S. oil, gas and military equipment and fight illegal immigration.

FIGHT ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION

Trump wants more help from India on unauthorized immigration. India is a major source of immigrants to the United States, including a large number in the tech industry on work visas and others in the U.S. illegally.

The joint statement said the two countries agreed to aggressively address illegal immigration and human trafficking by strengthening law enforcement cooperation.

India may prove critical to Trump's strategy to thwart China, which many in his administration see as the top U.S. rival. India is wary of neighboring China's military buildup and competes for many of the same markets.

Modi also worries that Trump could cut a deal with China that excludes India, according to Mukesh Aghi, president of the U.S.-India Strategic Partnership Forum lobbying group.

India has continued its ties with Russia as it carries out its war with Ukraine. India has remained a major consumer of Russian energy, for instance, while the West has worked to cut its own consumption since the war started.

"The world had this thinking that India somehow is a neutral country in this whole process," said Modi. "But this is not true. India has a side, and that side is of peace."🔺

NATO Membership for Ukraine Not Realistic-US



NATO Membership for Ukraine Not Realistic, Says Hegseth

NATO Touts European Spending on Ukraine as It Awaits Hegseth

  • Rutte says non-US allies gave 60% of Ukraine money in 2024 
  • Trump’s Pentagon chief Hegseth makes first visit to Brussels 

By Andrea Palasciano February 12, 2025 
  • European NATO members are aiming to demonstrate to the Trump administration the full scope of their financial support for Ukraine as they’re set to meet the new US Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth.
  • Pete Hegseth, left, with German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius,
    ahead of a NATO defence ministers' meeting in Brussels,
    on Feb. 12.

    Photographer: Johanna Geron/AFP/Getty Images

    With the future of the US’s aid commitment to Kyiv unclear, NATO defense ministers are hoping to learn more about President Donald Trump’s demands on the alliance when they meet in Brussels this week.(12-02-2025)
  • Allies are expecting Trump to keep pushing for more European spending and fairer burden sharing, as well as calling for a swift end to the war in Ukraine, but they’re also hoping to hear that the US commitment to the alliance won’t waver, according to several diplomats.
  • Hegseth will take part in a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group on Wednesday and then in a full gathering of the alliance’s defense ministers on Thursday. Their Ukrainian counterpart, Rustem Umerov, is also expected to join.
  • NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte touted a 20% increase in defense spending from non-US NATO allies last year, compared to 2023. He told reporters Wednesday that these non-US allies gave more than half of some €50 billion ($51.9 billion) in aid delivered to Ukraine last year.
  • During his first presidency, Trump frequently criticized Europe for lackluster defense spending, and those attacks have continued through recent weeks.
  • Trump recently said that NATO countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense, a figure no single ally reaches, not even the US. The alliance is expected to revise its current spending target of 2% in the coming months, which many, but not all members, now meet.
  • Internally, NATO planners estimate that between 3.5% and 3.7% of GDP would be needed to satisfy all the military requirements for the alliance’s defense plans, according to people familiar with the matter.
  • Separately, foreign ministers from France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, as well as top EU diplomat Kaja Kallas and new defense commissioner Andrius Kubilius, are due to discuss Ukraine in Paris on Wednesday evening.🔺
  • Source:Bloomberg

இந்திய-இலங்கை மீனவர் சங்கங்களிடையே கலந்துரையாடல்

இந்திய-இலங்கை கடற்றொழிலாளர்கள் பிரச்சனை மீனவர் சங்கங்களிடையே கலந்துரையாடல் இரு நாட்டு கடற்றொழிலாளர் பிரச்சனைக்கு தீர்வு காணும் முகமாக இந்திய...