India braces for economic, geopolitical impact of Trump’s new tariffs

Special India braces for economic, geopolitical impact of Trump’s new tariffs
US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hold a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on Feb. 13, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 10 August 2025

India braces for economic, geopolitical impact of Trump’s new tariffs

India braces for economic, geopolitical impact of Trump’s new tariffs
  • Modi set to meet China’s Xi, invites Vladimir Putin to visit India in the wake US tensions
  • Trump doubled US tariffs on India to 50 percent over New Delhi’s purchases of Russian oil

New Delhi: India is bracing for the impact of new US tariffs, with experts warning of the economic and political consequences of an unprecedented duty on exports, marking one of the highest tariffs the US has ever imposed on a major trading partner.

In an unexpected move last week, US President Donald Trump imposed an additional 25 percent tariff on Indian goods, citing New Delhi’s purchases of Russian oil. His Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said the oil imports amounted to “financing” Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The move increased the total duty on Indian exports to 50 percent. While India’s Ministry of External Affairs vowed to “take all actions necessary to protect its national interests,” experts do not see much room for negotiations, as the tariff regime is set to take effect next month.

“It will have economic repercussions if things are not changed. Fifty percent is a lot, and it will affect us. Right now, there is an exemption for pharmaceuticals, but in other areas, there will be an impact,” Manoj Joshi, distinguished fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, told Arab News.

“We don’t have much leverage. We don’t have many options. The US is the one taking these actions, so unless and until the US withdraws these taxes, there is not much India can do.”

The US and India have been in tariff talks since the beginning of the year, in the wake of the US ongoing global tariff campaign. Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a personal visit to Washington, D.C., in February to meet Trump and discuss strengthening bilateral ties, trade relations, and the procurement of new US weapons and aircraft.

In April, the Trump administration imposed a 25 percent reciprocal tariff on Indian goods in response to India’s continued purchases of Russian oil and to rectify trade imbalances. A new deal was expected in July, but Trump did not approve it, leading to a breakdown in talks.

The US threatened to increase tariffs on India if it were not given broader access to several key sectors, including automobiles, steel, aluminum, and dairy products — a concession New Delhi resisted.

“India is not going to compromise on agriculture and dairy products. India will find it very difficult to stop buying Russian oil. There is not much room for any kind of concessions from India’s side,” Joshi said.

The US is India’s largest export market, accounting for 18 percent of its exports and 2.2 percent of its gross domestic product. The latest estimates by Indian economists suggest that the new tariff could reduce GDP by 0.2 to 0.8 percentage points.

It could also have an impact on India’s global standing.

After emerging as a new superpower when it hosted the G20 Summit in 2023 and over the past few years betting everything on its strategic partnership with the US, India may now be forced to recalibrate its relations, including with its rival China.

India is a member of the QUAD — Quadrilateral Security Dialogue — a forum that also includes the US, Japan, and Australia and focuses on regional security and cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region.

India’s engagement with the bloc has increased in recent years, shifting from its earlier engagement with BRICS — a grouping that includes also Brazil, Russia, China, and Indonesia, and is the most powerful geopolitical forum outside of the Western world, accounting for 45 percent of the world’s population and 35 percent of its economy.

In the wake of tensions with the US, Modi is expected to visit China for a summit of the multilateral Shanghai Cooperation Organization and meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in late August. This will be his first official trip to China in over six years. The last visit took place before the 2020 Galwan Valley border clashes, which significantly strained India-China ties.

Modi’s office said on Saturday that he had invited Vladimir Putin to visit Delhi by the year’s end. It would be the Russian president’s first trip to India since December 2021.

“Consequences would be there so long as Trump is there. But the whole episode has exposed the leadership of India,” said Mohan Guruswamy, policy analyst specializing in economic and security issues.

“India has been ignoring its traditional allies. It has been pursuing QUAD and trying to appease the US, forgetting China and Russia. It has been pursuing the US and calling them strategic allies, and now the US has given it a shock.”


Turks in northern Greece held pending trial for smuggling weapons

Updated 8 sec ago

Turks in northern Greece held pending trial for smuggling weapons

Turks in northern Greece held pending trial for smuggling weapons
Greek police last week located a group of 15 people close to the Evros river at the Greek-Turkish border
The 12 suspects are accused of illegally entering Greece and smuggling weapons with the aim of supplying Turkish or other criminal groups active in the country

ATHENS: A Greek court has ruled that 12 Turks arrested in northern Greece on accusations of participating in an international criminal group smuggling weapons into the country should be detained pending trial, legal sources said on Thursday.
Greek police last week located a group of 15 people close to the Evros river at the Greek-Turkish border. They arrested most of them and confiscated two sacks and one suitcase near them, containing 147 pistols, dozens of bullets and weapons components wrapped in plastic bags.
The 12 suspects are accused of illegally entering Greece and smuggling weapons with the aim of supplying Turkish or other criminal groups active in the country. They have denied any wrongdoing, saying they are migrants and the guns were in the boat that traffickers used to cross the river.
Over the past years, Greece has seen a significant rise in the number of Turkish nationals involved in shootings or arrested for gun possession. Police, according to sources, have linked the increase to a bigger presence in Greece of Turkish criminal groups and gang members settling old scores on foreign ground.

Italy MPs protect ministers from trial in Libya case

Italy MPs protect ministers from trial in Libya case
Updated 31 min 21 sec ago

Italy MPs protect ministers from trial in Libya case

Italy MPs protect ministers from trial in Libya case
  • The Tribunal of Ministers requested parliamentary approval in August to prosecute them
  • Najim, head of Libya’s judicial police, was arrested in Turin on January 19

ROME: Italy’s parliament Thursday blocked attempts to prosecute two senior ministers and a top official over the controversial release of a Libyan official suspected of committing war crimes.
Justice Minister Carlo Nordio, Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi, and Cabinet Undersecretary Alfredo Mantovano — who oversees intelligence matters — have been investigated for their roles in the release and repatriation of Osama Almasri Najim in January.
The Tribunal of Ministers — a judicial body tasked with handling cases involving government members — requested parliamentary approval in August to prosecute them.
But the lower house of parliament, where Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s right-wing coalition has a comfortable majority, voted Thursday to reject the request.
Najim, head of Libya’s judicial police, was arrested in Turin on January 19 on a warrant from the International Criminal Court, only to be released by a Rome court on procedural grounds.
He was then flown home to Tripoli on an Italian air force plane.
Nordio defended his release at the time, saying the ICC warrant for his arrest had been poorly written.
Meloni was also investigated, but said in August she had been cleared.


Princess of Wales suggests parents should put down the phone to combat social discontent

Princess of Wales suggests parents should put down the phone to combat social discontent
Updated 35 min 11 sec ago

Princess of Wales suggests parents should put down the phone to combat social discontent

Princess of Wales suggests parents should put down the phone to combat social discontent
  • Kate collaborated with adult development researcher Robert Waldinger to warn that technology is contributing to an epidemic of disconnection
  • The princess has made early childhood development one of her primary causes

LONDON: The Princess of Wales has a suggestion for parents: Please put down the phone.
Kate, as she is commonly known, collaborated with adult development researcher Robert Waldinger to warn that technology is contributing to an epidemic of disconnection that is hurting family relationships. Devices that promise to keep us connected often do the opposite, they say in an essay posted on the Royal Foundation Center for Early Childhood website.
“We sit together in the same room while our minds are scattered across dozens of apps, notifications, and feeds,’’ the authors wrote. “We’re physically present but mentally absent, unable to fully engage with the people right in front of us.’’
The princess has made early childhood development one of her primary causes. She has now teamed up with Waldinger, who is the director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, a long-term study of adult life and happiness that concluded those with stronger relationships were more likely to live happy, satisfying and healthier lives.
“Look the people you care about in the eye and be fully there — because that is where love begins,” they said.


Taliban FM arrives in India on first visit by top Afghan leader since 2021

Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, right, meets India’s foreign secretary, Vikram Misri, left, in Dubai. (File)
Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, right, meets India’s foreign secretary, Vikram Misri, left, in Dubai. (File)
Updated 59 min 50 sec ago

Taliban FM arrives in India on first visit by top Afghan leader since 2021

Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, right, meets India’s foreign secretary, Vikram Misri, left, in Dubai. (File)
  • UN waived a travel ban on Muttaqi to allow him to visit New Delhi
  • He is expected to meet his Indian counterpart S. Jaishankar during the trip

NEW DELHI: Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi began an official visit to India on Thursday, the first by a senior Afghan leader since 2021.

Like all other countries, except for Russia, India does not officially recognize Afghanistan’s Taliban administration, which took over the country four years ago, when its Western-backed regime collapsed, and US-led troops withdrew after two decades of military occupation.

Most of the Taliban leaders, including Muttaqi, have been sanctioned by the UN, but the Security Council said last month that he was granted “an exemption to the travel ban” to visit New Delhi from Oct. 9 to 16.

He was offered a “warm welcome” by Indian Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal, who said in a statement that the ministry looked forward to “engaging discussions with him on bilateral relations and regional issues.”

Muttaqi, who met with India’s Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri in Dubai in January, is expected to hold talks with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar.

“It is scheduled that the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will hold discussions with his Indian counterpart and other officials on various political, economic, and trade issues, as well as on strengthening relations between Afghanistan and the region,” Hafiz Zia Ahamad, spokesperson of the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said in an X post.

While India’s engagement with the Taliban administration has grown in recent months — especially as Afghanistan’s ties with India’s archrival neighbor Pakistan have soured — Prof. Harsh V. Pant, vice president of Delhi-based think tank Observer Research Foundation, told Arab News that it did not signal imminent recognition of the Taliban government.

 

“Engagement is, of course, necessary with all of India’s neighbors, so India will be engaging. And I think the Taliban government has been signaling that it remains committed to protecting Indian interests,” Pant said.

“They have been at loggerheads with Pakistan in asserting their own identity and their own strategic autonomy. So, I think there, there is going to be much that is going to be convergent, but still there are divergences which are huge, and engagement should no longer be seen as any kind of endorsement of the regime, or any swift move towards recognition.”

The Afghan foreign minister’s visit follows his trip to Russia for the Moscow Format of Consultations on Afghanistan earlier this week.

Besides Russia and Afghanistan, the forum includes India, Pakistan, China, Iran and Central Asian nations, which on Tuesday issued a joint statement voicing opposition to any foreign military infrastructure in Afghanistan.

The statement came as US President Donald Trump has been pressing to regain control of the Bagram airbase near Kabul.


Pope Leo invokes criticism of Trump’s policies in first major document

Pope Leo invokes criticism of Trump’s policies in first major document
Updated 52 min 57 sec ago

Pope Leo invokes criticism of Trump’s policies in first major document

Pope Leo invokes criticism of Trump’s policies in first major document
  • Leo’s document, known as an apostolic exhortation, is focused on the needs of the world’s poor
  • The number of people living in poverty “should constantly weigh upon our consciences,” the document said

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo made an urgent plea for the world to help immigrants in his first major document, which was released on Thursday and invoked one of the late Pope Francis’ strongest criticisms of US President Donald Trump’s anti-immigration policies.
Leo’s document, known as an apostolic exhortation, is focused on the needs of the world’s poor. It calls for widespread changes to the global market system to address rising inequality and to help people living paycheck-to-paycheck.
The 104-page text started as a writing project by Francis, who was unable to complete it before his death in April after 12 years leading the global Church of 1.4 billion people. It was finished by Leo, the first US pope.
“I am happy to make this document my own – adding some reflections – and to issue it at the beginning of my own pontificate,” Leo writes at the beginning of the text.
Cardinal Michael Czerny, a senior adviser to both Francis and Leo, said that while the new document was started by the late pope it represents Leo’s positions.
“This is Pope Leo’s document,” Czerny told a Vatican press conference.

DOCUMENT REFERENCES CRITICISM OF BORDER WALLS
Elected in May to replace Francis, Leo has shown a much more reserved style than his predecessor, who frequently criticized the Trump administration.
But Leo has been ramping up his disapproval in recent weeks, drawing heated backlash from some prominent conservative Catholics.
“The Church, like a mother, accompanies those who are walking,” the pontiff writes in the document, titled “Dilexi te” (I have loved you). “She knows that in every rejected migrant, it is Christ himself who knocks at the door of the community.”
“Where the world sees threats, (the Church) sees children; where walls are built, she builds bridges,” Leo says, referencing Francis’ 2016 criticism of Trump as “not Christian” because of the president’s plan in his first term to build a wall on the US-Mexico border.
The White House has said Trump was elected based on his many promises, including to deport “criminal illegal aliens.”

WARNS OF ‘CESSPOOL’ WITHOUT MORAL DIGNITY
The number of people living in poverty “should constantly weigh upon our consciences,” the document said.
“There is no shortage of theories attempting to justify the present state of affairs or to explain that economic thinking requires us to wait for invisible market forces to resolve everything,” it said.
“The poor are promised only a few ‘drops’ that trickle down, until the next global crisis brings things back to where they were.”
The document signals that Leo shares some of the same priorities of Francis, who shunned many of the trappings of the papacy and frequently criticized the global market system as not caring for society’s most vulnerable people.
“The illusion of happiness derived from a comfortable life pushes many people toward a vision of life centered on the accumulation of wealth and social success at all costs, even at the expense of others,” the text says.
“Either we regain our moral and spiritual dignity or we fall into a cesspool.”