India, Russia to boost trade despite U.S. tariff pressure

MG News | August 22, 2025 at 10:38 AM GMT+05:00
August 22, 2025 (MLN): India and Russia agreed to expand bilateral trade ties,
signaling that U.S. tariff pressure on New Delhi over Russian oil purchases is
unlikely to derail their partnership.
India currently faces additional tariffs of up to 50% on
goods shipped to the U.S., after the Trump administration escalated tariff
threats in response to its substantial imports of Russian energy.
The India-Russia relations had been among the “steadiest of the major relationships in the world after the Second World War,” Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said at a joint press conference in Moscow.
Both countries vowed to boost bilateral trade, including increasing
India’s exports of pharmaceuticals, agriculture and textiles to Russia to help
reduce the current imbalance, Jaishankar said.
Bilateral trade between New Delhi and Moscow reached a record $68.7 billion for the year ended March 2025, with India’s increased oil imports contributing to a $59bn deficit, as CNBC reported.
Other plans include sending
Indian workers with skills in IT, construction and engineering to help Russia
address its labor shortages, Jaishankar added.
Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said cooperation in the hydrocarbon sector and Russian oil shipments to the Indian market are “making wide strides.”
Both sides remain committed to implementing joint energy production projects in the Russian Far East and the Russian Arctic shelf, among other sites, he said.
“This strategic partnership ... contributes to regional
security and stability, which is undeniably important considering the
challenging international circumstances that we are operating under,” Lavrov
added.
Western governments have imposed sanctions on Moscow, arguing India’s increased imports helped bankroll Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
New
Delhi has pushed back, saying the U.S. administration requested the purchases
to keep the markets calm, while pointing to the U.S. and European Union’s
continued trade with Russia.
Russian embassy officials in New Delhi reportedly said Wednesday that oil shipments to India will continue despite U.S. pressure, adding that Moscow hoped a trilateral meeting with India and China would take place soon.
“Despite the political situation, we can predict that the same
level of oil import [by India],” Roman Babushkin, the charge d’affaires at the
Russian embassy in India, told a press briefing.
“Russia has been a close strategic partner of India since the 1970s and the Trump administration’s tariff threats are not going to change that,” said Daniel Balazs, a research fellow at S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
“On the contrary, it might even act as a catalyst,”
Balazs added, prompting New Delhi to agree to a trilateral meeting that Moscow
sought to broker with China.
India was the second-largest buyer of Russian oil, importing 1.6 million barrels per day in the first half of this year, up from 50,000 bpd in 2020, though still trailing China’s 2 million bpd imports, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Washington has not placed secondary tariffs on China for its Russian oil purchases.
When asked about China’s role
in Russian oil purchases, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested that
Beijing’s imports were considered to be less egregious because it had already
been a major buyer even before Russia invaded Ukraine.
By contrast, Washington has escalated criticism of India in recent days, accusing the nation of profiteering from cheap Russian crude and threatening higher tariffs on Indian goods.
Trump’s true agenda appears to have little to do with Washington’s stated goal of curbing Moscow’s oil revenues, but extracting leverage from these trading partners, according to several geopolitical experts.
These include securing a trade deal with New Delhi while
pushing Putin for a ceasefire pact in Ukraine.
Last week, Trump rolled out a red carpet to greet Putin on his first visit to the U.S. in about a decade, sharing a ride with him in the presidential limousine to the venue.
The meeting was held in Alaska, which was once a part of Russia.
The meeting did not appear to have produced meaningful
steps toward a ceasefire in Ukraine and the Russian government has reiterated
its opposition to any short-term ceasefire deal with Ukraine.
Speaking at the joint news briefing Thursday, Lavrov said he had briefed Indian officials on those talks.
“India’s approach continues to
emphasize dialogue and diplomacy as essential to resolving differences,”
Jaishankar said.
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