The China Mail - Tariffs roil U.S.–India ties

USD -
AED 3.672502
AFN 63.49947
ALL 81.244999
AMD 376.110854
ANG 1.789731
AOA 917.000162
ARS 1399.250192
AUD 1.414027
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.686874
BAM 1.647475
BBD 2.012046
BDT 122.174957
BGN 1.647646
BHD 0.3751
BIF 2946.973845
BMD 1
BND 1.262688
BOB 6.903087
BRL 5.219402
BSD 0.998947
BTN 90.484774
BWP 13.175252
BYN 2.862991
BYR 19600
BZD 2.009097
CAD 1.361505
CDF 2254.99986
CHF 0.768495
CLF 0.021854
CLP 862.887821
CNY 6.90865
CNH 6.90302
COP 3660.44729
CRC 484.521754
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 92.882113
CZK 20.446299
DJF 177.88822
DKK 6.295945
DOP 62.233079
DZD 128.996336
EGP 46.640006
ERN 15
ETB 155.576128
EUR 0.84278
FJD 2.19355
FKP 0.732487
GBP 0.732755
GEL 2.675015
GGP 0.732487
GHS 10.993556
GIP 0.732487
GMD 73.499001
GNF 8768.057954
GTQ 7.662048
GYD 208.996336
HKD 7.816805
HNL 26.394306
HRK 6.350499
HTG 130.985975
HUF 319.342498
IDR 16832.8
ILS 3.09073
IMP 0.732487
INR 90.560993
IQD 1308.680453
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 122.169699
JEP 0.732487
JMD 156.340816
JOD 0.709037
JPY 152.919909
KES 128.812703
KGS 87.449527
KHR 4018.026366
KMF 415.000003
KPW 900.035341
KRW 1440.860289
KWD 0.30661
KYD 0.832498
KZT 494.35202
LAK 21437.897486
LBP 89457.103146
LKR 308.891042
LRD 186.25279
LSL 16.033104
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.604889
LYD 6.298277
MAD 9.134566
MDL 16.962473
MGA 4370.130144
MKD 51.922672
MMK 2099.386751
MNT 3566.581342
MOP 8.044813
MRU 39.81384
MUR 45.898647
MVR 15.404993
MWK 1732.215811
MXN 17.159839
MYR 3.907499
MZN 63.910042
NAD 16.033104
NGN 1353.400987
NIO 36.760308
NOK 9.50436
NPR 144.775302
NZD 1.657675
OMR 0.38258
PAB 0.999031
PEN 3.351556
PGK 4.288422
PHP 57.848498
PKR 279.396706
PLN 3.54867
PYG 6551.825801
QAR 3.640736
RON 4.291401
RSD 98.909152
RUB 77.226488
RWF 1458.450912
SAR 3.749258
SBD 8.045182
SCR 13.47513
SDG 601.489062
SEK 8.937225
SGD 1.262845
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.449694
SLL 20969.49935
SOS 570.441814
SRD 37.754017
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.637662
SVC 8.741103
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 16.029988
THB 31.079791
TJS 9.425178
TMT 3.5
TND 2.880259
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.718755
TTD 6.780946
TWD 31.383993
TZS 2607.252664
UAH 43.08175
UGX 3536.200143
UYU 38.512404
UZS 12277.302784
VES 392.73007
VND 25970
VUV 119.056861
WST 2.712216
XAF 552.547698
XAG 0.013065
XAU 0.000199
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.800362
XDR 0.687192
XOF 552.547698
XPF 100.459083
YER 238.350401
ZAR 15.93125
ZMK 9001.197201
ZMW 18.156088
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%


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.