• About Us
  • Our Editorial Policy
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise with Us
  • Our Advertisers
  • Contact Us
Australia India News
  • Alluring India - Brisbane Banner
India News Australia
  • Home
  • Current Issue
    Past Issue
  • India News
  • Business
  • World
    World This Week
  • Community News
  • What's On
  • Others
    Yoga in Australia News COVID-19 Community News Naari IPL News Health Travel Entertainment
  • National Events
  • Alluring India 2026
  • Please wait..
India News News

Trump’s tariff pressure failed to make Modi govt bend on Russian oil: IIM Professor

  • BY India News Newsdesk
  • March 17, 2026
  • 0 COMMENTS

New Delhi, March 17 (IANS) US President Donald Trump may have thought his tariff threats would make India blink, but a new paper by an IIM Udaipur professor says he got the country badly wrong.

The paper, by Professor Kunal Kamal Kumar and published in Third World Quarterly, looks at the 2025 US-India clash over Russian oil and arrives at a simple conclusion: tariff pressure was used as a weapon, but it did not deliver the result Washington wanted.

According to the paper, the US tried to push India into changing its Russian oil policy by threatening steep tariffs on Indian goods. But India did not see this as a small diplomatic issue. For New Delhi, this was about energy security, economic stability and national interest. When a country like India gets access to cheaper crude, that is not just foreign policy talk. It affects inflation, transport, industry and the lives of ordinary people.

That is why the paper says India’s stand was built around sovereignty, energy security and strategic autonomy. In plain language, the message was clear: decisions on India’s energy needs will be taken in Delhi, not under pressure from Washington.

This is also where the Narendra Modi government comes into the picture. The paper says PM Modi’s refusal to bend fits India’s larger line of strategic autonomy. Put simply, India under PM Modi has tried to show that it can work with all major powers, but it will not take decisions against its own interests just because another country applies pressure.

The paper also makes an important economic point. Tariffs are often presented as punishment for the other side. But in reality, they hurt the country using them as well. When the US puts tariffs on Indian goods, American importers pay more, supply chains get hit, prices rise, and consumers feel the burden. So this is not some magic weapon that hurts only India. It can hurt the US, too.

That is why the paper calls tariff threats a blunt tool. They create noise. They create pressure. But they do not always create surrender. In fact, sometimes they do the opposite. They harden the target’s stand, push trade into new channels and make the pressured country even more determined to stand on its own feet.

The paper points out that this dispute was not just about oil. It was also about a changing world. Countries like India are no longer willing to quietly accept Western pressure when their core interests are involved. The old habit of using economic force to make others fall in line is not working as easily as before.

The paper presents India’s policy as pragmatism. India imports most of its crude. Any government in Delhi has to think first about affordable supply, domestic stability and the national economy. Seen from that angle, buying discounted oil was not some reckless move. It was a practical decision taken in India’s interest.

The paper assumes significance as the IIM professor argues that Trump’s pressure tactic had limits, that tariff wars hurt both sides, and that India’s stand was rooted in hard national interest.

In the end, the takeaway is straightforward. Trump tried to use tariff pressure to make India fall in line. India did not. And according to this paper, that refusal was not a moment of defiance for the sake of optics. It was part of a bigger shift in how India under PM Modi now deals with the world: engage with everyone, protect national interest, and do not bend on matters of sovereignty and energy security.

–IANS

sps/vd

Post navigation

Golf: World No. 3 Fleetwood set to defend India Championship title
Missing man’s body found in waterfall in MP’s Mauganj

Related Post

Jodhpur C-section complications: Use of 25 medicines suspended, AIIMS to probe
June 23, 2026
Raj CM in Delhi today to attend a high-level meeting on Yamuna Water Project for Shekhawati region
June 23, 2026
Coast Guard’s fast patrol vessel ‘Achal’ to further strengthen maritime security
June 23, 2026
Tamil Nadu plans sharp increase in fees for fancy vehicle registration numbers
June 23, 2026

Our Current Issue

Alluring India 2026

Alluring India 2026

Our Advertisers

  • Battery Rebate australia
  • Bess Australia Solar Panels
  • Alluring India - Brisbane 2026

Follow Us

  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
INDIA NEWS on YouTube in Australia, bring to our readers and subscribers national and international news, editorials, expert columns, community activities and interviews of political leaders, celebrities, business professionals, academics and sport personalities among others.
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook

Category

  • Accident
  • Adani Australia
  • Advertorial
  • Arts & Culture
  • Ashes 2022
  • Australia

Recent News

  • Oracle cuts 21,000 jobs in a year,...
  • Jodhpur C-section complications: Use of 25 medicines...

Subscribe Newsletter

Get the latest creative news from india news

  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
Alluring India 2026