Ambuj Sahu, and Arun Sahgal
To be a more effective partner, the United States should recognize India’s sphere of influence in South Asia.
Recent remarks by the Trump administration on Operation Sindoor—India’s military response to a ghastly state-sponsored terrorist attack on Hindu tourists in the Kashmir valley—have struck a raw nerve in New Delhi. President Trump has repeatedly claimed credit for facilitating a ceasefire between India and Pakistan, even offering to mediate in Kashmir. He hinted at using trade as a coercive lever to resolve the crisis. At the same time, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick accused India of “rubb[ing] America the wrong way” by purchasing Russian defense equipment and implicitly backing de-dollarization through its membership in BRICS.
Trump’s repeated remarks have revived old anxieties in India being equated with a China-aligned Pakistan. What began as an Indian counter-terror operation escalated into retaliation on Pakistani airbases after Pakistan struck India’s military and civilian assets—yet the White House framed it as a Kashmir crisis. Lutnick’s comments reflect the outdated frameworks through which US policymakers often view India.
For the record, India has incrementally reduced its dependence on Russian arms over the past decade, and its external affairs minister has openly dismissed the idea of de-dollarization. Furthermore, the involvement of the Trump family in a cryptocurrency deal in Pakistan suggests that vested interests supersede strategic rationale in America’s dealings in the region.
Trump or Lutnick is not the issue here. The Biden administration has also spent considerable energy lecturing India on religious freedom and democracy while giving Pakistan a free pass on its persecution of Hindu minorities. Washington was critical of India’s purchases of Russian oil even when Europe continued to do the same. Differences between any two countries are inevitable, but in the case of the United States and India, they have played out in public, creating ugly optics and overshadowing progress in ties.