TRUMP SIGNALS INDIA VISIT AS NEW DELHI-WASHINGTON RELATIONS SHOW SIGNS OF RECOVERY
United States President Donald Trump has expressed his intention to visit India as New Delhi and Washington seek to improve strained ties. Trade disputes, disagreements over the India-Pakistan ceasefire, tariff battles, BRICS concerns and the deaths of Indian nationals in an attack near Oman have tested relations between the two strategic partners.
If officially announced by the White House, the visit would mark Trump's first trip to India since the beginning of his second term in 2025. His previous visit took place in 2020, when he received an elaborate welcome across the country during the "Welcome Trump" programme.
Despite strains in ties between New Delhi and Washington, Trump sought to downplay differences and said that India would continue to have a strong friend in the White House as long as he remained president.
Trump was originally expected to travel to India in August 2025 to participate in the QUAD Summit in New Delhi. However, tensions between the two countries escalated after the United States imposed a 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods.
Relations were further complicated by the military conflict between India and Pakistan in May 2025. Trump repeatedly claimed that his intervention prevented the confrontation from escalating into a full-scale war. While Pakistan publicly praised the United States President for facilitating a ceasefire, New Delhi maintained that there was no involvement by any third party.
According to reports, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's position and India's official stance rejecting Washington's role in the ceasefire displeased Trump, ultimately leading to the cancellation of his proposed visit to India for the QUAD Summit.
A 2025 report by The New York Times titled "The Nobel Prize and a Testy Phone Call: How the Trump-Modi Relationship Unraveled" stated that several factors contributed to Trump's decision to cancel his India trip. Among the most significant issues were Operation Sindoor and the India-Pakistan ceasefire, which were linked to Trump's efforts to strengthen his credentials for a Nobel Peace Prize.
Instead of Trump attending the summit, United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio travelled to New Delhi to represent Washington during meetings with leaders from Japan and Australia.
The deterioration in India-United States relations began with Trump's repeated claims that he had played a decisive role in halting hostilities between India and Pakistan. The absence of any acknowledgement from the Indian government added to diplomatic discomfort.
Tensions increased further after Trump launched his Liberation Day trade initiative in April 2025 and imposed a 25 per cent tariff on India, describing the country as the "maharaja of tariffs." An additional 25 per cent duty was later imposed over India's purchases of Russian oil, with Trump accusing New Delhi of contributing to Russia's military campaign in Ukraine.
As a result, the overall tariff burden on Indian goods reached 50 per cent, placing India among the countries facing the highest duties, alongside Brazil and China. India's participation in BRICS with Brazil and China also emerged as a factor contributing to friction between the two countries.
In February 2026, both nations announced that they had agreed upon an interim framework for bilateral trade. According to official fact sheets, the arrangement would reduce tariff levels imposed on India from 50 per cent to 18 per cent.
Another source of concern emerged after the outbreak of the Iran war. Several vessels carrying Indian crew members and seafarers came under attack in the Strait of Hormuz. Last week, three Indian nationals were killed after the Palau-flagged vessel MT Settebello was attacked by a United States aircraft off the coast of Oman.
Following the deaths, the Ministry of External Affairs summoned United States Chargé d'Affaires Jason Meeks twice and registered a strong diplomatic protest.
Trump's latest indication that he intends to visit India comes at a critical moment when both countries are attempting to repair a relationship strained by trade disputes, conflicting narratives over the India-Pakistan ceasefire, geopolitical disagreements and growing concerns over regional security. Any future visit by the United States President would be closely watched as a measure of the direction of one of the world's most significant strategic partnerships.

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