Concerns should be addressed in a mutually respectful way: US Congressman slams Trump over tariff imposition
Senior US Congressman Gregory Meeks has slammed US President Donald Trump for imposing punitive tariffs against India for importing oil from Russia and said such a step will risk years of careful work to build a stronger partnership between Washington and New Delhi.
US Representative Gregory Meeks said concerns should be addressed in a respectful way.
He wrote on X: "RM @RepGregoryMeeks: Trump's latest tariff tantrum risks years of careful work to build a stronger US-India partnership."
RM @RepGregoryMeeks: Trump's latest tariff tantrum risks years of careful work to build a stronger US-India partnership.
— House Foreign Affairs Committee Dems (@HouseForeign) August 7, 2025
We have deep strategic, economic, and people-to-people ties. Concerns should be addressed in a mutually respectful way consistent with our democratic values. https://t.co/T2GTZGKYAS
"We have deep strategic, economic, and people-to-people ties. Concerns should be addressed in a mutually respectful way consistent with our democratic values," the Congressman said.
India won't compromise: Modi's strong response to Trump's tariff imposition
In a strong response to US President Donald Trump's 50 percent tariffs on Indian imports, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said his country won't compromise and he is even "ready to pay heavy personal price".
The Prime Minister made the remark addressing the MS Swaminathan Centenary International Conference in Delhi.
"For us, the welfare of our farmers is the highest priority. India will never compromise on the interests of its farmers, livestock rearers, and fisherfolk. I know I will have to pay a heavy personal price for this. But I am ready," Modi said.
"For the fisherfolk of my country, for the livestock rearers of my country — today, India is ready. We are continuously working towards increasing farmers’ income and creating new sources of livelihood," he added.
Trump's latest tax crusader takes total duties on import of Indian goods into the United States to 50 percent, 20 percent more than the tariff on China and 31 percent more than on Pakistan.
In an executive order signed, Trump wrote, "I find the Government of India is currently, directly or indirectly, importing Russian Federation oil... in my judgement I determine it necessary to impose an ad valorem duty on imports of articles from India..."
The 50 percent tariff hit comes hours after angry comments about India-US trade relations.
"India has not been a good trading partner... we settled on 25 percent... but I think I'm going to raise that substantially over the next 24 hours because they're buying Russian oil," he told a US broadcaster.
That potential change has been underlined by Trump giving Pakistan a big rate cut on Islamabad's tariff to 19 percent and signing a new trade deal, including plans to develop Pak's oil reserves.
Trump announced on Wednesday that he would increase the tariffs imposed on Indian imports "very substantially" over the next 24 hours due to India's continued purchases of Russian oil.
"India has not been a good trading partner, because they do a lot of business with us, but we don't do business with them. So we settled on 25 percent but I think I'm going to raise that very substantially over the next 24 hours, because they're buying Russian oil," he told CNBC in a televised interview.
This comes a day after Trump threatened that he would "substantially" raise US tariffs on India over its purchase of Russian oil, stating that the South Asian country doesn't care for the lives lost in Ukraine.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
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