Ravi Agrawal
Former U.S. President Barack Obama once predicted that India and the United States would form a defining partnership of the 21st century. Recent events show he may have gotten this one wrong. The White House has imposed one of its highest levies on imports from India—a 50 percent tariff—and U.S. President Donald Trump has hurt a proud nation’s sentiments by saying it has a dead economy.
Trump’s moves threaten to reverse a decades-long trajectory of closer relations between the world’s two biggest democracies. It is likely no coincidence that amid shakier ties with Washington, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently attended a summit in Tianjin, China, and was seen embracing Russian President Vladimir Putin and hobnobbing warmly with Chinese President Xi Jinping. On this week’s FP Live, I spoke with Nirupama Rao, a former Indian foreign secretary who also served as ambassador to China and to the United States. Subscribers can watch the full interview on the video box atop this page or listen to the FP Live podcast. What follows here is a condensed and lightly edited transcript.