India-US relationship status set for update with Modi visit | India News - The Times of India
India News: PM Narendra Modi will visit the US on February 12-13 at the invitation of President Donald Trump.
Not signaling,it should be the obvious.
Hmm...signaling?
Visakhapatnam was recently visited by the U.S. Navy with two of their ships docked at our Vizag port.
I was invited on behalf @USEmbassyNewDelhi and @USConsulateHyderabad to witness its interiors and for the first time on YouTube, interview the crew!
I also had the opportunity to see a little bit of the city for the first time ever. Hope you enjoyed this one, hit like and subscribe to our channel for more.
On a visit to New Delhi, Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles has said his country’s relationship with India is “the highest priority” as they mark the fifth anniversary of their comprehensive strategic partnership. Meanwhile, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in Singapore that the growing defense relationship with India passes “new milestones by the day.” As concerns over China’s military buildup grow among all three nations, and the United States increasingly sees India as a counter to China in the Indo-Pacific, what does India make of this Western stance? Does New Delhi have a divergent approach? And is there a limit to its U.S. and Australian defense relationships as it pursues a policy of strategic autonomy, including an ongoing friendship with Russia?
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Trump announces trade deal with India centred on oil, reduced tariffs
According to U.S. President, tariff on Indian goods will go from 25 per cent to 18 per centwww.theglobeandmail.com
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US agrees to drop tariffs after India stops Russian oil purchases
Tariffs will drop from 50% to 18% on Indian goods, while India has agreed to stop buying Russian oil.www.bbc.com
18%
Good if it holds...that would be a lower tariff than any major ASEAN state (19%), Bangladesh (20%), Vietnam (20%) or Pakistan (19%). Major competitive advantage for exporters of labour-intensive sectors like textiles, leather goods etc. Businesses in Pakistan in particular cannot be happy about this...they were already fuming at the EU FTA which saw their competitive advantage evaporate in a big way. Now the US market too.
At least until Trump's next flip-flop, that is
What's more interesting is that it seems we'll have a major hand in refining the type of sour crude (which most refineries elsewhere in the world can't handle) that just got unlocked in Venezuela. It'll need some investment though. US drilling & Indian refining could make a lot of money for both as it would bring a huge new source of crude online. But that could be bad news for both Russia & the MidEast though.
Good if it holds...that would be a lower tariff than any major ASEAN state (19%), Bangladesh (20%), Vietnam (20%) or Pakistan (19%). Major competitive advantage for exporters of labour-intensive sectors like textiles, leather goods etc. Businesses in Pakistan in particular cannot be happy about this...they were already fuming at the EU FTA which saw their competitive advantage evaporate in a big way. Now the US market too.
Sure. We will see how it goes. There is a ton of investment that needs to be done in Venezuela (given what has atrophied in basic crude production there) for some period of time before it becomes comprehensively online etc.What's more interesting is that it seems we'll have a major hand in refining the type of sour crude (which most refineries elsewhere in the world can't handle) that just got unlocked in Venezuela. It'll need some investment though. US drilling & Indian refining could make a lot of money for both as it would bring a huge new source of crude online. But that could be bad news for both Russia & the MidEast though.