Saturday, May 23, 2026

"India and the United States will continue to work closely for the global good," says Modi after meeting US Secy of State Marco Rubio

 PM gets White House invite as he holds security, trade talks with Marco Rubio


The three-day visit to India by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio comes at a time when ties between India and the US under Trump 2.0 have continued to fluctuate amid trade tensions.  

US envoy Sergio Gor, who joined Rubio for the meeting with PM Modi, said the talks also spanned the Indo-Pacific, where China has sought to assert its strength. India has always been viewed by the US as a counterbalance to China in the crucial region.


"We had a productive discussion on ways to deepen US-India cooperation across security, trade, and critical technologies... India is a vital partner to the United States!" Gor tweeted. He also said that PM Modi was invited to the White House in the "near future".  






Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday held crucial talks on security and trade with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who in turn extended him an invitation to the White House on behalf of Donald Trump. The three-day visit to India by Rubio comes at a time when ties between India and the US under Trump 2.0 have continued to fluctuate amid trade tensions.  


"Happy to receive the US Secretary of State, Mr. Marco Rubio. We discussed sustained progress in the India-US Comprehensive Global Strategic Partnership and issues related to regional and global peace and security.


India and the United States will continue to work closely for the global good," Modi tweeted.   


The timing of the visit is crucial amid reports that Donald Trump was considering relaunching strikes on Iran after talks for a peace deal, which is being mediated by Pakistan, failed to bear any fruit.  










The Prime Minister last met Trump in February 2025, when he became one of the first world leaders to visit the White House following the eccentric Republican's return to office. Trump called PM Modi a "great friend", and the duo pledged to double US-India trade to $500 billion by 2030.


However, ties reached a nadir in the following months as Trump imposed tariffs of up to 50% on India over its continued purchase of Russian oil - a move that the White House claimed was funding Moscow's war machine against Ukraine. The strain in ties was tacitly used by Pakistan to warm up to Trump by massaging his ego.


A turnaround came in February this year after India and the US reached a trade deal framework. Trump also cut tariffs on Indian imports to 18%. However, the Iran war and the Middle East turmoil have delayed the signing of a formal trade deal.


In this one year, as ties see-sawed between the US and India, PM Modi and Trump have somehow not managed to cross paths at major global summits. However, the big meeting may happen as early as next month on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in France, where PM Modi has been invited as a special invitee. 


 Intense negativity characterises European and, to a lesser degree, North American political sentiment. In France, 90% of people questioned by Ipsos believed their country is on the wrong track. 

In Britain, it was 79%;  in Germany, 77%; 


in the US, 60%. 

Europeans feel similarly glum about the bigger, global picture.   


Unlike the past; there is less of optimism and there is more cautiousness.  

The US has itself to blame; and India may find its new stance fully justified.  






A poll in January 2026 by the magazine 'India Today' found that 54 percent of Indians felt that India’s relations with the United States have worsened under Donald Trump.



ends 




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