Tariffs, Russia, Pakistan, H-1B: When 2025 tested India-US ties
New York/Washington: The US and India ties in 2025 have been a rollercoaster ride as punitive and reciprocal tariffs, a conflict with Pakistan and stringent immigration policies strained and tested the bilateral relationship in a manner not seen in decades.
However, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the US to meet President Donald Trump and the signing of the 10-year defence framework pact between the two countries were seen as the high points in the relationship.
The year began on an exemplary note with Modi’s visit to Washington, DC, for his first bilateral meeting with Trump in his second term in the White House in February.
Modi was only the fourth foreign dignitary - after leaders of Israel, Japan and Jordan - to meet Trump within weeks after his inauguration as 47th US President.
The meeting encapsulated the strengthening US-India strategic partnership.
Trump and Modi announced plans to negotiate the first tranche of a mutually beneficial, multi-sector Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) by the fall of 2025, aiming to more than double trade to USD 500 billion by 2030.
A month earlier, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar sat in the front row inside the US Capitol Rotunda when he attended Trump’s inauguration on January 21, representing the Government of India.
Hours later, the newly sworn-in Secretary of State Marco Rubio hosted Jaishankar, Japan’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Takeshi Iwaya and Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong for the first Quad Foreign Ministers’ Meeting of the new Trump administration.
But as the months rolled on, bilateral ties that were going full steam ahead encountered stumbling blocks in the form of differences over tariffs and trade. In his address to the Joint Session of Congress, Trump criticised India and other countries for the high tariffs they charged on American products, the first of the many statements he made over the course of the year slamming the high levies imposed by India.
While Trump described India as a “very high tariff nation”, members of his administration too did not hold back in their criticism, with his trade adviser Peter Navarro calling India the ‘Maharaja of tariffs’.
On April 2, which Trump proclaimed as ‘Liberation Day’, he slapped reciprocal tariffs on countries around the world and announced a 26 per cent “discounted reciprocal tariff” on India, half of the 52 per cent levies imposed by it on American goods. However, Trump announced on various occasions that a trade deal with India would happen “soon”.
The two nations made “significant progress” towards a mutually beneficial bilateral trade pact when US Vice President JD Vance visited India and held wide-ranging talks with PM Modi.
Vance and Modi announced the Terms of Reference for the bilateral trade agreement between the US and India.
It was around the time that Vance was in India that a horrific terror attack took place on April 22 in Pahalgam perpetrated by The Resistance Front, a proxy of Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba, in which 26 civilians were killed.
In retaliation, India launched Operation Sindoor targeting terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. On May 10, the fourth day of the conflict, Trump suddenly announced on his Truth Social page that the US had brokered a ceasefire between India and Pakistan.
And since May 10, Trump has now repeated the claim more than 70 times that he solved the conflict between India and Pakistan and that he used trade to bring the fighting to an end.
In June, Modi and Trump were scheduled to meet on the sidelines of the G7 Leaders’ Summit in Kananaskis, Canada, but Trump returned to Washington early. The two leaders, however, spoke on June 17, a 35-minute phone call.
Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said that Modi clearly conveyed to Trump that at “no point” during the days following Operation Sindoor was there any discussion, at any level, on an India-US Trade Deal, or any proposal for a mediation by the US between India and Pakistan.
Trump has been critical of India’s purchases of Russian oil and, in August, imposed an additional 25 per cent levy on Indian imports, bringing the total tariffs imposed on India to 50 per cent, among the highest in the world.
US lawmakers have condemned the tariffs imposed by Trump on India, with Indian-American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi saying the levies place an “unnecessary strain” on Washington’s relationship with Delhi.
The Trump administration has also intensified its crackdown on immigration, both legal and illegal, imposing new and stringent restrictions on visas such as H-1B, which are used by a large number of Indian professionals to live and work in the US.
Describing abuse of the H-1B programme as a national security threat, Trump signed a proclamation imposing a USD 100,000 fee on new H-1B visas, a move that caused widespread panic, confusion and concern among Indian professionals.
Later, Trump also appeared to defend the H-1B visa programme, saying America has to bring in talent from around the world as it does not have “certain talents” in the country.
Even as Washington and New Delhi dealt with these complications, there were areas of cooperation between the two sides that stood out this year.
Highlighting the strong counter-terrorism cooperation, the US extradited Tahawwur Hussain Rana to India to face justice for his role in planning the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. Further, the US designated The Resistance Front as a foreign terrorist organisation.
The two countries also signed a 10-year defence framework pact in October as a “signal” of growing bilateral strategic ties even as Washington vowed to work closely with New Delhi to ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth signed the framework agreement for the ‘US-India major defence partnership’ pact following their wide-ranging talks in Kuala Lumpur amid efforts by the two sides to repair ties.
Despite challenges in bilateral ties, conversations between Trump and Modi underline the strategic importance of the relationship.



