India, Trump and Board of Peace
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Earlier, US President Donald Trump had claimed Prime Minister Narendra Modi told him that India would stop buying Russian crude oil. However, India suggested that there was no such conversation.
Referring to delays in the delivery of Apache attack helicopters, Donald Trump claimed that PM Modi personally approached him to resolve the issue.
By Bharath Rajeswaran and Vivek Kumar M Jan 22 (Reuters) - Indian share benchmarks rose on Thursday, tracking a rebound in global equities after U.S. President Donald Trump walked back on threats to impose tariffs on European countries and ruled out the use of force to seize Greenland.
We begin with Wall Street, where nerves were tested this week amid market turmoil spurred by Donald Trump’s tariff “shock regime”. What to know: The US president’s retreat from his tariff threats over Greenland this week followed a sharp stock sell-off, underscoring investors’ power to influence Trump even as he brushes off Washington’s top allies.
India’s playbook for dealing with Trump-era disruption offers lessons for navigating political and economic uncertainty.