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Home > India > “India Has Not Caved In To US Pressure In Trade Talks “: Former Diplomat Vikas Swarup

“India Has Not Caved In To US Pressure In Trade Talks “: Former Diplomat Vikas Swarup

Former Diplomat Vikas Swarup has recently said that there are three reasons US President Donald Trump has imposed 50 per cent tariffs on Indian goods including his "being miffed that India has not acknowledged his role" in cessation of hostilities with Pakistan following Operation Sindoor, noting that if there is positive outcome of Alaska talks, Russia sanctions will be off the table.

Published By: Moumi Majumdar
Last updated: August 13, 2025 20:35:17 IST

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Former Diplomat Vikas Swarup has recently said that there are three reasons US President Donald Trump has imposed 50 per cent tariffs on Indian goods including his “being miffed that India has not acknowledged his role” in cessation of hostilities with Pakistan following Operation Sindoor, noting that if there is positive outcome of Alaska talks, Russia sanctions will be off the table. 

Former Diplomat Vikas Swarup’s Statement

In an interview with ANI, Vikas Swarup, a former High Commissioner to Canada and a renowned author, stated that India has not caved in to the US pressure in trade talks to provide more access to the country’s agriculture and dairy sectors, adding the US is exerting pressure tactics to get India to agree to its maximalist demands.

Trump announced 25 per cent tariffs on Indian goods plus an unspecified penalty in July, even as there were hopes of an interim India-US trade deal that would have otherwise helped avoid elevated tariffs. A few days later, he imposed another 25 per cent tariff, taking the total to 50 per cent, over India’s imports of Russian oil.

“We have to understand why these tariffs have been imposed. I personally feel that there are three reasons. One, Trump is not happy with India because we are a member of BRICS and somehow, in his head, he has got this notion that BRICS is an anti-America alliance which is hell-bent on creating an alternative currency to the dollar. So, because of that, he feels that India should not be a member of the BRICS. Two, Operation Sindoor and his so-called role in bringing about the ceasefire,” Swarup said. 

“We have been saying right from the beginning that Trump had no role because we do not accept external mediation. This ceasefire was mediated directly between the DGMOs of Pakistan and India at the request of the DGMO of Pakistan. Trump has now said almost 30 times that it was he who got the two countries to stop back from the brink, who stopped a nuclear conflagration in the subcontinent.  So, obviously he is miffed that India has not acknowledged his role, whereas Pakistan has not only acknowledged his role but has even nominated him for a Nobel Peace Prize,” he added.

India had carried out Operation Sindoor in May in response to the Pahalgam terror attack and carried out precision strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and PoJK. India had replled subsequent Pakistani aggression and pounded its airbases. Referring to Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) talks between India and US, Vikas Swarup said Trump is resorting to pressure tactics to get India to sign on his maximalist demands. 

“…This is part of his pressure tactics to get India to sign on the dotted line on the maximalist demands that the US is making with regard to access to our dairy and agriculture and GM Crops. We have not caved in and it is also in a way a signal to Russia because he is also frustrated that he has not been able to get President Putin to agree to the ceasefire that Zelenskyy has agreed to,” he said. 

Vikas Swarup referred to the summit meeting between President Trump and President Putin in Alaska on August 15 over the Ukraine conflict. “Now they are meeting in Alaska on 15th August. If there is a positive outcome of the Alaska talks, then I am 100% sure that the Russia sanctions will be off the table because Putin is not going to accept a ceasefire and yet be saddled with economic sanctions,” he said. 

India and the US initiated talks for a just, balanced, and mutually beneficial Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) in March this year, aiming to complete the first stage of the Agreement by October-November 2025. On April 2, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order for reciprocal tariffs on various trade partners, imposing varied tariffs in the range of 10-50 per cent. He subsequently kept the tariffs in abeyance for 90 days, while imposing a 10 per cent baseline tariff. (ANI)

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