U.S. Presses India: Cut Russian Oil Imports or Watch Trade Deal Slip Away

Washington is making it clear to New Delhi: any path forward on a U.S.–India trade deal runs through Russia’s oil fields. In recent talks, U.S. trade negotiators told Indian counterparts that curbing purchases of Russian crude is critical to lowering America’s punitive tariffs and unlocking a deal, sources told Reuters on Friday.

India is pushing back. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal called the negotiations “constructive,” but New Delhi is making room for strategic wiggle; officials have floated substituting Russian oil with crude from Iran or Venezuela, if permitted by Washington, to assuage U.S. pressure without fully changing Delhi’s energy equation.

This is more than a trade spat. It reflects a tectonic tension between India’s insistence on “strategic autonomy” in energy policy and a U.S. willingness to weaponize trade for geopolitical ends. India has repeatedly accused the West of double standards: while America demands India abandon Russian oil, the U.S. and EU continue trading with some Russian exports.

The stakes are high. Trump already slapped India with a 25 % reciprocal tariff, then tacked on another 25 % penalty tied to Russian oil imports—bringing the total to 50 %. That’s among the steepest trade punishments ever imposed on a major economy.

But India is pushing back. India’s energy mix depends heavily on affordable sources, and discounted Russian crude has filled that role. Abruptly curbing it could send domestic fuel prices and import bills soaring.

Still, Washington has leverage. In a world where global trade and energy are inseparable, pressuring energy buyers is the new frontier of diplomacy. India could blink—or it could double down.

If India shifts just enough, tariffs might slide. But if New Delhi holds its ground, a standoff is coming—not just over trade, but over how much sovereignty a rising power can claim when energy is the currency of influence.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

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