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Toulon win Munster thriller as Quins progress in Champions Cup
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NHL players will complete at Olympics, says international ice hockey chief
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Leeds rally to avoid FA Cup shock at Derby
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Rassat sweeps to slalom victory to take World cup lead
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Liverpool's Bradley out for the season with 'significant' knee injury
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Syria govt forces take control of Aleppo's Kurdish neighbourhoods
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Comeback kid Hurkacz inspires Poland to first United Cup title
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Kyiv shivers without heat, but battles on
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Salah and fellow stars aim to deny Morocco as AFCON reaches semi-final stage
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Mitchell lifts New Zealand to 300-8 in ODI opener against India
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Iran protest death toll rises as alarm grows over crackdown 'massacre'
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Malaysia suspends access to Musk's Grok AI: regulator
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Venezuelans await release of more political prisoners, Maduro 'doing well'
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Kunlavut seals Malaysia Open title after injured Shi retires
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Medvedev warms up in style for Australian Open with Brisbane win
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Bublik powers into top 10 ahead of Australian Open after Hong Kong win
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Sabalenka fires Australian Open warning with Brisbane domination
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In Gaza hospital, patients cling to MSF as Israel orders it out
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New protests hit Iran as alarm grows over crackdown 'massacre'
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Svitolina powers to Auckland title in Australian Open warm-up
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Keys draws on happy Adelaide memories before Australian Open defence
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Scores of homes razed, one dead in Australian bushfires
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Ugandan opposition turns national flag into protest symbol
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Bears banish Packers, Rams survive Panthers playoff scare
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'Quad God' Malinin warms up for Olympics with US skating crown
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India eyes new markets with US trade deal limbo
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Syria's Kurdish fighters agree to leave Aleppo after deadly clashes
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Tariffs roil U.S.–India ties
A rupture is widening between the world’s largest and oldest democracies, and its shockwaves are already rippling through trade, technology, and security. In Washington, tariffs have become the blunt instrument of choice. In New Delhi, officials weigh retaliation and diversification. Between them lies a relationship strained by economic coercion, immigration politics, and unresolved security grievances.
In early August, the United States announced an additional blanket import tax on Indian goods—on top of existing duties—pushing levies on some exports to levels few partners face. The measure is framed as punishment for India’s continued purchases of Russian crude and as part of a broader “reciprocal” tariff agenda. Whatever the intent, the signal is unmistakable: trade, once the ballast of the partnership, is now a pressure point.
The economic fallout is immediate and visible. Export orders for high-exposure sectors have slowed sharply, and factories in India’s most globally connected clusters report cuts to shifts and payrolls. U.S. buyers, facing higher landed costs, are postponing or cancelling shipments; Indian suppliers, squeezed between thin margins and weak demand, are trimming production. Prices for some U.S. imports are set to climb, with industry groups warning of pass-through effects for consumers.
Immigration, for decades a bridge between the two nations, is becoming another fault line. With new rulemaking floated in Washington, the H-1B program—through which Indian professionals make up the overwhelming majority of skilled visas—is again under the knife. Proposals to favor only the highest wages and public calls to “pause” the program altogether have rattled tech workers and employers alike. That uncertainty threatens one of the most resilient pillars of U.S.–India ties: the human capital pipeline that fuels American innovation and anchors Indian diaspora influence.
Security cooperation, meanwhile, is caught between momentum and mistrust. On one hand, defense-industrial collaboration has never looked more ambitious, with negotiations to co-produce advanced jet engines on Indian soil and a long-horizon framework to deepen interoperability. On the other, a lingering law-enforcement case from late 2024—U.S. prosecutors alleging a foiled plot to assassinate a government critic on American soil—has left scar tissue that resurfaces whenever tensions rise. The two governments say they are working the issue quietly; it still shadows the relationship.
Geopolitically, the timing could hardly be worse. Washington’s stated priority remains balancing China in the Indo-Pacific. Yet coercive tariffs on India, a cornerstone of that strategy, risk pushing New Delhi to hedge—reopening trade channels with Beijing and doubling down on groupings where Washington lacks leverage. Allies from the Pacific to Europe are watching: if tariffs replace diplomacy, informal coalitions like the Quad become harder to sustain.
In New Delhi, policymakers are calibrating their response. India’s energy calculus—discounted Russian crude that helps tame domestic inflation—has not fundamentally changed. Nor has its preference for strategic autonomy. But the costs are rising. If the new U.S. duties take full effect and persist, expect targeted countermeasures, accelerated efforts to localize critical supply chains, and fresh bids to diversify export markets away from an increasingly volatile United States.
For American business, the risks are symmetrical. Tariffs function as a tax on U.S. consumers and a drag on companies that rely on Indian inputs and talent. The more Washington signals unpredictability—on trade, visas, and technology transfers—the more boardrooms will dust off contingency plans: dual sourcing, near-shoring, or shifting investment to jurisdictions with steadier policy.
This is where leadership matters. Wise statecraft distinguishes leverage from self-harm. Diplomacy tests arguments before testing alliances. Foresight weighs tactical wins against strategic drift. When unilateral tariffs and campaign-style messaging substitute for patient negotiation, the costs compound: higher prices at home, weaker coalitions abroad, and partners who conclude that hedging is safer than alignment.
None of this is irreversible. A disciplined off-ramp exists: suspend escalatory tariff tranches pending structured talks; ring-fence high-impact sectors with temporary exemptions; codify a transparent process for visa reform that preserves merit-based mobility; and firewall law-enforcement cases from trade retaliation. Pair that with a clear roadmap on defense co-production and export controls, and the relationship can re-center on mutual interests rather than mutual recriminations.
Something serious is indeed happening between India and the United States. Whether it becomes something truly terrible depends on choices made in the coming weeks. Prudence, diplomacy, and foresight are not luxuries here—they are the strategy.
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