Indian PM Modi to meet Trump on US trip this week

Special Indian PM Modi to meet Trump on US trip this week
Indian PM Narendra Modi waves before boarding a plane in New Delhi for his trip to France and the United States on Feb. 10, 2025. (Prime Minister’s Office)
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Updated 10 February 2025

Indian PM Modi to meet Trump on US trip this week

Indian PM Modi to meet Trump on US trip this week
  • Two leaders enjoyed cordial relations during Trump’s first term as president
  • The US is India’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade worth more than $118 billion

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to meet US President Donald Trump this week, as New Delhi seeks closer ties with Washington in various fields, including technology, defense and trade.

Modi will be among the first foreign leaders to meet Trump at the White House during his second term. Before flying to the US, he will make a stop in France to meet French President Emmanuel Macron and to attend the AI Action Summit.

“I look forward to meeting my friend, President Trump,” Modi said in a statement before his departure on Monday.

“Although this will be our first meeting following his historic electoral victory and inauguration in January, I have a very warm recollection of working together in his first term in building a Comprehensive Global Strategic Partnership between India and the US.”

The two leaders shared cordial relations during Trump’s first term as president.

In 2019, Trump joined Modi at a “Howdy Modi” rally in Houston, Texas that drew about 50,000 people and was billed as one of the largest receptions for a foreign leader in the US.

When Trump made his first visit to India in February 2020, Modi hosted him in his home state of Gujarat, where the “Namaste Trump” welcome event was attended by about 100,000 people.

“This visit will be an opportunity to build upon the successes of our collaboration in his first term and develop an agenda to further elevate and deepen our partnership, including in the areas of technology, trade, defence, energy, and supply chain resilience,” Modi said.

India considers the US as one of its “strongest international partnerships” in recent years, Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said on Friday.

The US is India’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade worth more than $118 billion in 2023-2024 and India posting a trade surplus of $32 billion.

Modi’s visit comes just days after US authorities deported 104 Indians in shackles on a military plane, a much-publicized transfer that sparked outrage among legislators and citizens in the South Asian nation.


North Korea condemns ‘wicked nature’ of latest US sanctions

North Korea condemns ‘wicked nature’ of latest US sanctions
Updated 9 sec ago

North Korea condemns ‘wicked nature’ of latest US sanctions

North Korea condemns ‘wicked nature’ of latest US sanctions

SEOUL: North Korea condemned on Thursday the latest US sanctions imposed on people and organizations accused of cybercrimes, saying they showed Washington’s “wicked nature to be hostile” against the regime.
The criticism came after the US Treasury announced this week sanctions on eight individuals and two entities “for their role in laundering funds derived from a variety of illicit Democratic People’s Republic of Korea  schemes.”
The individuals were “state-sponsored hackers,” the department said, whose illicit operations were conducted “to fund the regime’s nuclear weapons program” by stealing and laundering money.
Pyongyang’s “cybercriminals have stolen over $3 billion over the past three years,” US officials said, “primarily in cryptocurrency, often using sophisticated techniques such as advanced malware and social engineering.”
Kim Un Chol, vice-minister for US affairs at North Korea’s foreign ministry, denounced the move in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency  on Thursday.
“Recently, the new US administration has imposed its exclusive sanctions on the DPRK, the fifth of their kind since its assumption of office,” he said.
“By doing so, the US administration showed to the full its stand that it would be hostile toward the DPRK to the last,” he added.
Kim said sanctions would not affect the policy course of the nuclear-armed state but would “only be recorded as a typical example symbolising the failure in its incurable policy toward the DPRK.”
The latest measures came after US President Donald Trump repeatedly expressed willingness to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during his Asia tour last week, an offer that went unanswered by Pyongyang.
Kim Jong Un met Trump three times for high-profile summits during the US leader’s first term, but talks collapsed over what concessions Pyongyang was prepared to make on its atomic weapons.