US Trade Envoy In India To Rekindle Trade Talks
WASHINGTON, D.C.- As US Assistant Trade Representative for South and Central Asia, Brendan Lynch travels to India for trade negotiations on September 16, experts in Washington believe that the resumption in negotiations indicates a positive trend and India would decide “how and whether” to address US concerns.
Siddharth Sharma, an Associate for India and South Asia at McLarty Associates, a consultancy in Washington, DC, argued that the direction of the talks is “positive” and an early agreement may be possible if both sides keep the deal “package narrow.”
“If negotiators keep the package narrow across tariff relief, agriculture access and standards, an early agreement is realistic. The direction is positive, though timing will depend on details,” he said.
Lynch arrives in India for a one-day meeting with India’s chief trade negotiator, Rajesh Agrawal, scheduled for September 16.
Sergio Gor, President Donald Trump’s nominee for US Ambassador to India, called New Delhi a “strategic partner” during his Senate confirmation hearing last week and promised to strengthen defense and economic ties with New Delhi.
Gor also revealed that India and the US are close to a trade deal.
“We’re actively negotiating with the Indians right now. We’re not that far apart right now on a deal. In fact, they’re negotiating down nitty-gritty of a deal,” he said.
Sharma asserted that Gor’s statements are encouraging for both sides to conclude an early agreement.
“Gor clearly outlined the administration’s economic agenda for the United States and India: fair and reciprocal trade, better market access and regulatory transparency, a target of $500 billion in bilateral trade by 2030, and deeper cooperation in AI, semiconductors and critical minerals. It is an encouraging signal for ties with a key ally, provided follow-through reduces nontariff barriers and clarifies standards,” he noted.
However, India’s purchases of Russian oil remain a sticking point. Gor emphasized that persuading India to move away from Russian oil was a “top priority” for the Trump administration.
Last week, US President Donald Trump pressured NATO and G7 countries to halt buying Russian oil before imposing new sanctions.
“I am ready to do major Sanctions on Russia when all NATO Nations have agreed, and started, to do the same thing, and when all NATO Nations STOP BUYING OIL FROM RUSSIA”, he posted on Truth Social.
In an interview with Fox News on September 12, Trump also said that his decision to put punitive levies on New Delhi caused a “rift with India.”
“India was their biggest customer. I put a 50% tariff on India because they’re buying oil from Russia. That’s not an easy thing to do. That’s a big deal, and it causes a rift with India,” Trump added.
Wendy Cutler, Senior Vice President at the Asia Society Policy Institute, analyzed India’s strategy to deal with the Trump administration and the way forward.
“India has been muted in issuing public comments critical of the Trump administration. That would only add fuel to the fire. India will need to decide for itself on how and whether to address US concerns, while taking steps to reduce its dependence on the US market,” she said. (IANS)
VIJAY
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One way would be for the US (or ask its allies) to sell oil to India matching the Russian price?
September 16, 2025