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This Week in AsiaPolitics

Trump’s Pakistan pivot redefines US-India dynamics: ‘no permanent friends’

The US president announced a ‘massive’ oil exploration deal with Pakistan soon after imposing a 25 per cent tariff on Indian goods

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Supporters of India’s main opposition Congress party burn an effigy of US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during protest against the US imposing a 25 per cent tariff on all Indian goods. Photo: dpa
Junaid Kathju
An unexpected resurgence in ties between the United States and Pakistan amid Washington’s simmering tensions with India has turned the tables in the dynamics between the three nations, according to observers.
US President Donald Trump last week imposed a 25 per cent tariff on goods imported from India, on top of a “penalty” import tax, citing New Delhi’s trade barriers and continued purchases of Russian oil and weapons.

Hours after the announcement, the American leader revealed a “massive” oil exploration deal with Pakistan, saying that some day, India might have to buy oil from Islamabad.

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Michael Kugelman, director of the Wilson Centre’s South Asia Institute, said the tables had turned in the US-Pakistan-India triangle.

US relations with Pakistan had experienced “unexpected resurgence”, Kugelman told This Week in Asia, adding that the sudden change signalled a serious challenge for New Delhi, given Washington and India had seen a deepening strategic partnership over the last two decades.

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“There have been moments of crises, bumps on the road, but they have largely been surmountable, but in this case you are looking at a long period of a time, there have been repeated cases of US statements messaging actions that have concerned India a lot,” Kugelman said.

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