The comments by top Trump administration officials came a day after Donald Trump announced the imposition of a 25 per cent tariff on all goods coming from India starting August 1, plus an unspecified penalty for buying Russian crude oil and military equipment.
India-US trade deal: US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday said that President Donald Trump and the whole trade negotiation team have been “frustrated” with India over the trade talks, even as Secretary of State Marco Rubio flagged New Delhi’s purchases of Russian oil as a “point of irritation” in India-US relations.
“Well, I don’t know what’s going to happen. It will be up to India. India came to the table early. They’ve been slow rolling things. So I think that the President, the whole trade team, has been frustrated with them,” Bessent said in an interview with CNBC. He also said India has been a large buyer of sanctioned Russian oil, which they then resell as refined products. “So, they have not been a great global actor,” he added.
Bessent’s comments came a day after Trump announced the imposition of a 25 per cent tariff on all goods coming from India starting August 1, plus an unspecified penalty for buying Russian crude oil and military equipment.
‘Point of irritation’ in India-US ties
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday claimed that India’s oil purchases are helping Moscow to sustain its war efforts in Ukraine, and said it is “most certainly a point of irritation” in New Delhi’s relationship with Washington. “Look, global trade – India is an ally. It’s a strategic partner. Like anything in foreign policy, you’re not going to align 100 per cent of the time on everything,” Rubio said in an interview with Fox Radio.
Rubio acknowledged India has “huge energy needs and that includes the ability to buy oil and coal and gas and things that it needs to power its economy like every country does, and it buys it from Russia, because Russian oil is sanctioned and cheap and – meaning they have to – in many cases, they’re selling it under the global price because of the sanctions.”
He added that “unfortunately, that is helping to sustain the Russian war effort. So it is most certainly a point of irritation in our relationship with India – not the only point of irritation. We also have many other points of cooperation with them.
“But I think what you’re seeing the President express is the very clear frustration that with so many other oil vendors available, India continues to buy so much from Russia, which in essence is helping to fund the war effort” and allowing this war to continue in Ukraine.
Trump tariffs on India
The comments by top Trump administration officials came a day after Donald Trump announced the imposition of a 25 per cent tariff on all goods coming from India starting August 1, plus an unspecified penalty for buying Russian crude oil and military equipment.
Trump’s surprise announcement on Wednesday is being seen as a pressure tactic to get New Delhi to agree to demands made by the US, which has, in recent days, got favourable trade deals with major partners like Japan, the UK and the European Union.
India has said it will take all necessary steps to safeguard and promote national interest and that the implications of the tariffs are being examined.
(With PTI inputs)













































