Janata Dal United MP Sanjay Kumar Jha on Thursday said that Indian government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi are capable of finding solutions to the 25 per cent tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump on country's exports.
The 25 per cent tariff and additional penalties imposed by US President Donald Trump on India should be viewed as a temporary negotiating tool rather than a permanent shift in trade relations, according to Gaurav Sansanwal, Fellow for the Chair on India and Emerging Asia Economics at the
Speaking on Trump's announcement of a 25 per cent tariff plus additional penalties on India, set to take effect August 1, Vickery described the move as part of the US President's typical pattern of generating bilateral pressure and chaos to eventually claim credit for resolving a crisis o
President Donald Trump's threat to impose 25 per cent tariffs on India should be seen as a negotiating tactic rather than a fundamental shift in US-India relations, according to former US Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal.
Rashtriya Janata Dal MP Manoj Jha on Wednesday expressed frustration over Prime Minister Narendra Modi's speech in the Lok Sabha, questioning why the PM spoke in vague terms without naming anyone, particularly regarding US President Donald Trump's claims of brokering a ceasefire between I
During a gaggle with the press interaction aboard Air Force One on Tuesday (local time), Trump responded to a report suggesting that India might be preparing for 20 to 25 per cent tariffs, stating that India had been imposing higher tariffs on the US as compared to other countries. He fur
Raut argued that PM Modi will not attend because then he will have to question US President Donald Trump's repeated claims of mediating the cessation of hostilities between India and Pakistan through trade.
"The sensational new revelation by President Trump this time around is that five jets may have been downed. The Prime Minister, who has had years of friendship and huglomacy with President Trump going back to Howdy Modi in Sept 2019 and Namaste Trump in Feb 2020, has to now himself make a
The Congress on Saturday questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi on "compromising" the country's "honour" over U.S. President Donald Trump's repeated claims that he stopped a war between India and Pakistan.
Congress General Secretary Jairam Ramesh on Tuesday pointed that US President Donald Trump has claimed credit for ending India-Pakistan conflict for a total of 22 times in 65 days.
He pointed to his strategy of using trade as leverage, stating, "We did that through trade. I said, we are not going to talk to you about trade, unless you get this thing settled, and they did."