Bitget App
Trade smarter
Buy cryptoMarketsTradeFuturesEarnWeb3SquareMore
Trade
Spot
Buy and sell crypto with ease
Margin
Amplify your capital and maximize fund efficiency
Onchain
Going Onchain, without going Onchain!
Convert
Zero fees, no slippage
Explore
Launchhub
Gain the edge early and start winning
Copy
Copy elite trader with one click
Bots
Simple, fast, and reliable AI trading bot
Trade
USDT-M Futures
Futures settled in USDT
USDC-M Futures
Futures settled in USDC
Coin-M Futures
Futures settled in cryptocurrencies
Explore
Futures guide
A beginner-to-advanced journey in futures trading
Futures promotions
Generous rewards await
Overview
A variety of products to grow your assets
Simple Earn
Deposit and withdraw anytime to earn flexible returns with zero risk
On-chain Earn
Earn profits daily without risking principal
Structured Earn
Robust financial innovation to navigate market swings
VIP and Wealth Management
Premium services for smart wealth management
Loans
Flexible borrowing with high fund security
Trump slams India’s trade strategy as Modi denies tariff cut claim

Trump slams India’s trade strategy as Modi denies tariff cut claim

CryptopolitanCryptopolitan2025/09/02 10:50
By:By Jai Hamid

Share link:In this post: Trump called India’s trade policy a “one-sided disaster” after Modi’s visit to China. The U.S. imposed 50% tariffs on India over Russian oil and high import duties. India rejected the tariffs and accused the U.S. and EU of hypocrisy over Russia.

Donald Trump called out India’s trade practices just hours after Prime Minister Narendra Modi returned from China. Trump said the United States was stuck in what he described as “a totally one-sided disaster” when it comes to trade with India.

He posted on Truth Social that India had once offered to slash tariffs to zero, but now it was “getting late” and that the move should’ve happened “years ago.”

This all came after Modi met with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjin, held between August 31 and September 1.

Trump’s complaints weren’t entirely vague. He pointed directly at India’s high import tariffs and its continued oil and arms trade with Russia, arguing that American companies are blocked from selling into the Indian market while Indian goods flood U.S. shelves.

Trump points to Russian oil and weapons as sticking points

Trump wrote, “The reason is that India has charged us, until now, such high Tariffs, the most of any country, that our businesses are unable to sell into India.” He added, “It has been a totally one sided disaster!”

He didn’t give a date for when India allegedly offered to drop its tariffs but made it clear he believes the offer came far too late.

See also What Trump controlling the Fed board actually means for monetary policy

The U.S. imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods in response to what it sees as unfair trade practices. Last month alone, Washington added a 25% secondary duty, targeting India for continuing to purchase Russian oil. India rejected the move and described the new duties as “unfair, unjustified and unreasonable.” That came directly from India’s response after the announcement.

Tensions have been building for months. Relations between Washington and New Delhi have taken a hit, despite more than two decades of warming ties. Several American officials have recently raised concerns about India’s ties to Russia. But India didn’t stay quiet. It pushed back, pointing out that the same countries criticizing it are also still doing business with Russia.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs released a statement last month saying, “It is revealing that the very nations criticizing India are themselves indulging in trade with Russia. Unlike our case, such trade is not even a vital national compulsion [for them].”

That was a direct jab at both the U.S. and the European Union.

China meeting happens as trade talks collapse

While the U.S. applied new tariffs, Modi was in China meeting with Xi. Both leaders spoke about cooperation and said they wanted to be partners instead of rivals. But that didn’t go unnoticed in Washington. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent downplayed the meeting, calling the SCO summit “performative,” according to Reuters.

See also S&P 500 surges above 6,500 for first time ever

Trade talks between India and the U.S. aren’t moving. In May, India proposed a deal: no tariffs on steel, auto parts, and pharma products from either side, but only up to a certain limit. It was described as a “zero-for-zero” proposal. That deal didn’t happen, and the 50% tariff followed soon after.

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said Tuesday that India is still trying to negotiate a trade deal. “We are in dialogue with the US for a bilateral trade agreement,” Goyal said while speaking at an event in New Delhi. But there’s no formal negotiation happening right now. A U.S. team was supposed to visit India in August, but that trip was canceled.

According to Bloomberg News, informal communication between both sides is still ongoing, but no one’s talking about timelines or next steps. Despite all the back-and-forth, no deal is on the table, and both governments are stuck with rising tariffs, missed opportunities, and cold diplomacy.

KEY Difference Wire helps crypto brands break through and dominate headlines fast

0

Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

PoolX: Earn new token airdrops
Lock your assets and earn 10%+ APR
Lock now!

You may also like

Layer 2 Resilience and Investment Risk in Ethereum's Ecosystem

- Ethereum's L2 ecosystem faces operational risks as recent outages expose fragility in sequencer infrastructure and smart contract security. - Starknet's 2025 Grinta upgrade failure caused a 3-hour network freeze due to sequencer incompatibility, while Arbitrum and Base suffered outages from centralized sequencer vulnerabilities. - ZKsync's April 2025 airdrop exploit (111M tokens stolen) highlights critical security gaps, prompting price drops and exchange suspensions. - Investors must balance innovation

ainvest2025/09/02 18:00
Layer 2 Resilience and Investment Risk in Ethereum's Ecosystem

Stellar Network’s Protocol 23 Upgrade: A Strategic Catalyst for Institutional Adoption and Network Value Growth

- Stellar Network’s Protocol 23 upgrade (Sep 3, 2025) introduces CAP-0062-CAP-0068 and SEP-0041 to enhance scalability, smart contract efficiency, and institutional performance. - Features like parallel transaction execution (CAP-0063) and Soroban Live State Prioritization reduce costs and improve throughput, targeting 5,000 TPS for enterprise adoption. - Exchange pauses (e.g., Upbit) during the upgrade highlight Stellar’s institutional relevance, while optimized fees and compliance tools position it to co

ainvest2025/09/02 18:00
Stellar Network’s Protocol 23 Upgrade: A Strategic Catalyst for Institutional Adoption and Network Value Growth

MoonBull ($MOBU): The Whitelist Advantage and Why It Could Be the 1000x Crypto of 2025

- MoonBull ($MOBU)’s whitelist presale, with 80% spots filled by August 2025, leverages FOMO and Ethereum infrastructure to drive early adoption. - High APY staking rewards (66–80%) and a 30% liquidity pool aim to balance virality with sustainability, fostering community governance. - Ethereum Layer 2 scalability and institutional-grade audits reduce risks like rug pulls, appealing to both retail and institutional investors.

ainvest2025/09/02 18:00
MoonBull ($MOBU): The Whitelist Advantage and Why It Could Be the 1000x Crypto of 2025

The Reshaping of Institutional Crypto Portfolios: Why Ethereum is Winning Over Bitcoin in Q3 2025

- Institutional crypto portfolios shifted sharply toward Ethereum in Q3 2025, driven by its upgrades, regulatory clarity, and higher yields. - Ethereum ETFs saw $33B inflows vs. $1.17B Bitcoin outflows, with the ETH/BTC ETF ratio rising sixfold to 0.12 by July. - Whale activity confirmed the trend: $5.42B BTC-to-ETH transfers and 22% of Ethereum's supply now controlled by whales. - Ethereum's deflationary model, 4.8% staking yield, and $223B DeFi TVL outperformed Bitcoin's 1.8% yield and stagnant narrative

ainvest2025/09/02 18:00
The Reshaping of Institutional Crypto Portfolios: Why Ethereum is Winning Over Bitcoin in Q3 2025