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Repati nundi 50% tarrifs ready India ki


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Posted

hitting H1b is like cutting ur DICK to piss on someone.. max he could do is regulate to cut crap. Very easily companies will outsource.. 

thatha thinks he can bully anyone and everyone .. lol.. if push comes to shove..notla M petti .. G lo rod estharu manolu

Posted
27 minutes ago, har_D_ick said:

hitting H1b is like cutting ur DICK to piss on someone.. max he could do is regulate to cut crap. Very easily companies will outsource.. 

thatha thinks he can bully anyone and everyone .. lol.. if push comes to shove..notla M petti .. G lo rod estharu manolu

Manolu means Indians ? I am looking for the day 

Posted
2 hours ago, ARYA said:

20 lb Rice bag $100 ki ammutara ika

Eat quinoa healthy anta kadaa. Dallas lo pindi girni petti quinoa pindi padithe profits possible ! 

Posted
19 minutes ago, Paamu said:

Eat quinoa healthy anta kadaa. Dallas lo pindi girni petti quinoa pindi padithe profits possible ! 

Abbeee tellati sona masoori lo neyyi gongura pacchadi kalupukuni tinakapothe maaku ruchinchadu ano antunna dallas vucnles

Posted

Pharma meeda tariffs vested bokka US ke paduddi.

India ki US kakapote inko 200 countries to export to.

Maree red flower Aite tappa Trump gadu ee decision teesukodu anukuntunna.

Posted
7 hours ago, Android_Halwa said:

After India’s first peaceful nuclear test, the country faced severe restrictions on access to advanced technology. Nuclear and missile technologies were denied, and even military communications were curtailed to the extent that the armed forces had to rely on civilian systems for their operations. These limitations and external pressures eventually led to the creation of the Indian National Satellite System (INSAT). Today, India has developed its own satellites serving diverse purposes such as communication, weather forecasting, geospatial mapping, education, and more.

 

Dont forget GPS, thanks to omericans

  • Upvote 1
Posted
21 minutes ago, pakeer_saab said:

Dont forget GPS, thanks to omericans

Oh yeah, Post Kargil was a complete picture all together. Infact, the spice missiles used in sindhoor and bunker buster buster bombs used in Balakot strikes are also the result of post Kargil restriction. At the height of Kargil war, India wanted to buy bunker Buster bombs but as always we were denied the sale. Glad they did and we now have Brahmos. 

Posted
9 hours ago, Democraticcompulsion said:

Pharma meeda tariffs vested bokka US ke paduddi.

India ki US kakapote inko 200 countries to export to.

Maree red flower Aite tappa Trump gadu ee decision teesukodu anukuntunna.

pharma tariffs are coming, matter of time. mostly in sept. all his decisions till date suggest he is red flower. Midterms varaku ee chaos tappadu, hopefully GOP will lose in a landslide

 

 

Posted

mundamopi BJP gallu states ni kelakatam meeda pettina shradha lo sagam reforms meeda petti unte we would have been in a decent position. 2nd term entha manchi chance unde with full majority. COVID taruvatha udaragottadu Modi adigo reform idigo reform ani, bokka kuda ledu just increased freebies to win elections. 

  • Upvote 2
Posted

India’s Russian oil gains wiped out by Trump’s tariffs

NEW DELHI, Aug 27 (Reuters) - India saved billions of dollars by stepping up imports of discounted Russian oil in the wake of the war in Ukraine, but punitive tariffs imposed by the U.S. that came into effect on Wednesday will quickly undo the gains, with no easy solutions in sight.
 
Analysts estimate India has saved at least $17 billion by increasing oil imports from Russia since early 2022. U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to impose additional tariffs of up to 50% on Indian imports could slash exports by more than 40%, or nearly $37 billion, this April-March fiscal year alone, according to New Delhi think-tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI).
 
The fallout from the tariffs will be lingering, and could be politically debilitating for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with thousands of jobs at risk in labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, gems, and jewellery.
 
India's response in the coming weeks could reshape its decades-old partnership with Russia and recalibrate its increasingly complex ties with the U.S., a relationship Washington sees as vital to countering China’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific, analysts said.
 
"India needs Russia for defence equipment for several more years, cheap oil when available, geopolitical support in the continental space and political backing on sensitive matters," said Happymon Jacob, the founder of Delhi's Council for Strategic and Defence Research. "That makes Russia an invaluable partner for India."
 
But he added: "Despite the difficulties between Delhi and Washington under Trump, the United States continues to be India’s most important strategic partner. India simply doesn’t have the luxury of choosing one over the other, at least not yet."
 
Two Indian government sources said New Delhi wants to repair ties with Washington and is open to increasing purchases of U.S. energy but is reluctant to fully halt Russian oil imports. Discussions with the U.S. are ongoing, India’s foreign secretary told reporters on Tuesday, with officials from both countries holding virtual talks on trade, energy security including nuclear cooperation, and critical minerals exploration.

CRUDE AT $200/BBL?

Russian crude now accounts for nearly 40% of India’s total oil purchases from nearly nothing before the war, and analysts say any immediate stoppage would not only signal capitulation under pressure but also be economically unfeasible. Indian purchases are led by billionaire Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), opens new tab, which operates the world's largest refining complex in Modi's home state of Gujarat.
 
Global crude prices could more than triple to around $200 a barrel if India, the world’s third-largest oil consumer and importer, stops buying oil from Russia, according to internal Indian government estimates reviewed by Reuters. It would also lose the up to 7% discount Russian oil offers compared to global benchmarks.
 
In an unusually sharp statement this month, India accused the U.S. of double standards in singling it out for Russian oil imports while itself continuing to buy Russian uranium hexafluoride, palladium and fertiliser. New Delhi says other countries that have stepped up purchases of Russian oil, like China, have not been penalised.
 
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has accused India of profiteering from its sharply increased purchases of Russian oil and called it unacceptable. He told CNBC in an interview last week that unlike India's surge in Russian oil imports after the start of the war in Ukraine, China's purchases had increased to 16% from 13%.
 
India's foreign ministry has said, opens new tab its crude imports from Russia are "meant to ensure predictable and affordable energy costs to the Indian consumer. They are a necessity compelled by the global market situation".
 
New Delhi warns that halting Russian oil imports, which is currently around 2 million barrels per day, would disrupt its entire supply chain and send domestic fuel prices soaring. It has said the previous U.S. administration under Joe Biden had backed its purchases of Russian oil to keep global prices stable.
 
Russia has said it expects India to keep buying oil from it.
 
Modi has not directly commented on the tariffs but has repeatedly pledged support for India’s farmers - seen as a veiled response to Trump’s demands to open up India’s vast agricultural sector.
Farmers are a key voting bloc, and Modi faces a tough election in the rural state of Bihar later this year. He has also pledged major cuts in a goods and services tax by October to lift domestic demand.

TRILATERAL TIES

In a flurry of diplomatic activity aimed at multipolarity, senior Indian officials have travelled to Russia in recent days, while Modi is set to visit China this month for the first time in over seven years. India-China relations began thawing about a year ago, following a deadly border clash in 2020.
 
Modi is expected to meet both Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin at a summit meeting starting on Sunday of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, a regional security bloc. But the sources said India is still very cautious in its relations with China and not yet considering a trilateral summit between the three leaders, as hoped by Russia.
 
Other countries could take their cue from how India reacts to the U.S. tariffs, experts said.
"The key takeaway for other countries is that if India - an emerging major economic and military power - is under immense pressure from the U.S., they might have even less capacity to withstand American pressure," said Jacob, the analyst.
 
"Additionally, some might interpret the current dynamics as indicating that China could potentially serve as a counterbalance, especially given Trump’s unpredictable and aggressive geopolitical moves."
 
International relations experts say Trump's recent moves have plunged the U.S.-India relationship back to possibly its worst phase since the U.S. imposed sanctions on India for nuclear weapons tests in 1998. Besides trade, the row could affect other areas like work visas for Indian tech professionals and offshoring of services.
 
And even if India is able to eventually get some of the tariffs reversed, several consequences will linger, especially in trade.
 
"Competitors like China, Vietnam, Mexico, Turkey, and even Pakistan, Nepal, Guatemala, and Kenya stand to gain, potentially locking India out of key markets even after tariffs are rolled back," said GTRI founder Ajay Srivastava, a former Indian trade official.
Posted

'Modi’s war': Trump aide Navarro links India to Ukraine conflict

Peter Navarro criticized India’s purchase of discounted Russian oil, linking it to funding the Ukraine war and calling for tariff reductions if India ends these imports.

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro referred to the Ukraine conflict as "Modi's war," criticizing India for buying discounted Russian oil in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Balance of Power.

He argued that these purchases have enabled Moscow’s aggression and imposed costs on American taxpayers. Navarro also stated that India could receive a 25% reduction in US tariffs if it ceases buying Russian oil.

When asked whether the U.S. is in discussions with India or considering any tariff adjustments, White House adviser Peter Navarro responded, "It's really easy. India can get 25% off tomorrow if it stops buying Russian oil and helped to feed the war machine."

Navarro also remarked, "I'm puzzled. Because Modi is a great leader. This is a matured democracy with matured people running it."

Spaking about India’s position on trade, he said, "What's troubling to me is that the Indians are so arrogant about this. They say, 'Oh, we don't have higher tariffs. Oh, it's our sovereignty. We can buy oil from anyone we want," as quoted by Bloomberg.

He criticized India’s continued purchase of Russian oil at discounted rates, stating, “Russia uses the money it gets to fund its war machine, kill more Ukrainians.” He argued that this has led to increased demands on U.S. resources through Kyiv's requests for weapons and financial aid.

“Everybody in America loses because of what India is doing. The consumers and businesses and everything lose, and workers lose because India’s high tariffs cost us jobs, and factories, and income and higher wages. And then the taxpayers lose because we got to fund Modi’s war,” he added.

Navarro accused India of helping bankroll Moscow's war effort. "By purchasing Russian oil at a discount, Russia uses the money it gets to fund its war machine kill more Ukrainians," he said.

He argued that the costs ripple across the US economy: "Consumers and businesses and everything lose, and workers lose because India's high tariffs cost us jobs, and factories, and income and higher wages. And then the taxpayers lose because we got to fund Modi's war."

“I mean Modi’s war because the road to peace runs, in part, through New Delhi,” Navarro said.

 

 

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