India has reportedly paused plans to buy billions in U.S. arms after Trump doubled tariffs on Indian exports to 50%
The post India has reportedly paused plans to buy billions in U.S. arms after Trump doubled tariffs on Indian exports to 50% appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
India has paused plans to acquire U.S. military equipment worth billions of dollars, in the first concrete sign of diplomatic fallout after President Donald Trump imposed steep tariffs on exports this week, dragging bilateral ties to their lowest point in decades. According to some Indian officials familiar with the matter, New Delhi has held off on deals for Stryker combat vehicles, Javelin anti-tank missiles, and Boeing P-8I maritime reconnaissance aircraft. The duties, raised on August 6 from 25% to 50%, were imposed as punishment for New Delhi’s continued imports of Russian oil. The move marks a major setback in the growing defense relationship between the two countries, long touted as a counterbalance to China’s influence in Asia. Tariffs trigger diplomatic chill Trump announced the 25 percentage-point tariff increase on August 6, arguing that India’s purchases of discounted Russian oil were funding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The new duty, among the highest levied on any U.S. trading partner, came on top of an existing 25% tariff and follows a series of disputes that have tested the durability of the U.S.–India relationship. Defense Minister Rajnath Singh had been scheduled to visit Washington in the coming weeks to unveil new procurement agreements, including a $3.6 billion deal for six Boeing P-8I aircraft for his country’s navy. The trip was quietly canceled, according to sources. The Indian government, however, moved quickly to deny reports of any suspension, calling them “false and fabricated” in a statement late on Friday. The statement further stated that procurement is still progressing as per extant procedures. A partnership under strain Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi had earlier pledged to deepen defense ties, shifting India’s procurement away from Russia and towards Western suppliers. The Asian nation is the world’s second-largest arms importer and has increasingly turned to the U.S.,…
Filed under: News - @ August 8, 2025 10:27 pm