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President Trump repeated his claim that India will cut Russian oil imports.
Speaking at White House Diwali celebrations Tuesday, Trump told reporters:
"I spoke to Prime Minister Modi today, as I mentioned before. And we just have a very good relationship. And he's not going to buy much oil from Russia. He wants to see the war end with Russia-Ukraine. And, as you know, they're not going to be buying too much oil. So they've cut it way back and they're continuing to cut it way back."
Trump said Modi assured him during their phone call that India would reduce purchases because Modi "wants to see the war end."
Modi acknowledged the call on social media. He thanked Trump for "warm greetings" on Diwali.
But Modi said absolutely nothing about Russian oil.
India's foreign ministry also stayed silent. An official told the BBC it had "no new comment" on Trump's remarks.
This mirrors what happened last week. Trump made similar claims then. India's foreign ministry said it was "not aware" of any such phone call.
India became a major Russian oil buyer after the Ukraine war started in 2022.
Western nations stopped purchasing Russian crude and imposed sanctions. Russia needed new customers. India stepped up.
Delhi bought Russian crude at heavily discounted prices. The government justified this decision as vital for: • Energy security • Providing affordable fuel to millions of people • Managing inflation
India also pointed out that many Western countries, including the U.S., continue trading with Russia in various sectors.
If India actually cuts Russian oil imports, it hurts Russia's war funding.
Oil exports are crucial to Russia's economy. Losing India as a major buyer would: • Reduce Russian revenue • Force Russia to find other markets • Put more pressure on Moscow
But there's a problem: India hasn't confirmed any commitment to cut purchases.
This situation is awkward for several reasons:
Trump claims Modi made a promise Modi doesn't mention it publicly India's foreign ministry won't confirm or deny
Either: • Trump is overstating what Modi said • Modi made private assurances he's not ready to announce publicly • There's miscommunication between the leaders
New Delhi faces competing pressures.
From the West: Stop buying Russian oil, don't fund Putin's war
Domestic needs: Provide affordable energy to 1.4 billion people
Economic reality: Russian crude comes at steep discounts
India has defended its purchases by noting: • Energy security is a national priority • Western countries still trade with Russia • Developing nations can't afford to ignore discounted oil
Trump's repeated claims without Indian confirmation create a credibility problem.
If Modi actually promised to cut oil imports, why wouldn't India announce it? Such a commitment would: • Please the U.S. and Western allies • Show India taking a stronger stance on Ukraine • Be diplomatically valuable
India's silence suggests either: • No firm commitment was made • Commitment came with conditions Trump isn't mentioning • India prefers flexibility over public promises
Trump wants credit for getting India to reduce Russian oil purchases.
But India isn't playing along. Modi's silence is conspicuous.
This could mean: • Trump misunderstood the conversation • Modi made vague statements Trump interpreted as commitments • India gave private assurances but won't confirm publicly • No meaningful agreement exists
For Russia, this uncertainty is actually good news. If India were genuinely cutting purchases significantly, Moscow would already be feeling the pain and India would likely confirm the decision.
For Trump, this becomes an issue if India's imports don't actually decline. He's claimed success twice now. If Russian oil keeps flowing to India at current levels, it undermines his credibility.
For India, staying silent preserves flexibility. No public commitment means no obligation to follow through if circumstances change.
The pattern is clear: Trump makes claims about India cutting Russian oil. India stays quiet. Actual import levels continue largely unchanged.
Talk is cheap. Oil imports are measurable. We'll know the truth when we see India's actual purchase data in coming months.
For now, Trump is claiming a win. India isn't confirming it. And Russian oil likely keeps flowing to Indian refineries despite the White House celebration rhetoric.
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