Washington: United States
Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove issued a sharp warning over the current
trajectory of India-US relations, questioning whether US President Donald Trump
risks becoming "the president who lost India" amid escalating
tensions over tariffs, visa fees and political grievances.
Her remarks were made during a
congressional hearing on the US-India Strategic Partnership. Building on this
concern, Kamlager-Dove underscored India's central role in sectors vital to the
United States, including defence, energy, AI, space and advanced technologies.
"The US relationship with India will be defining for both countries in how
we place ourselves in the 21st-century world order," she said. She added
that working through the Quad "helps maintain a free and open
Indo-Pacific."
She then linked these strategic
priorities to what she described as a sharp decline in goodwill. Kamlager-Dove
argued that President Trump inherited a partnership marked by an energised
Quad, growing defence-technology cooperation, coordinated supply-chain efforts
and strong political momentum, but has since weakened it. "Flush, flush,
flush -- flushed down the toilet," she said, framing the shift as driven
by personal grievances rather than national interests.
Her warning deepened as she said
Trump risks becoming the president who "lost India" or pushed India
away, even while signalling openness toward Russia.
She accused him of eroding
trust through trade policies and what she characterised as a preoccupation with
winning a Nobel Peace Prize.
She pointed to tariffs and visa
measures as the clearest sources of strain. Kamlager-Dove noted that a 50 per
cent tariff on Indian goods and a 25 per cent tariff on India-linked Russian
oil imports have stalled high-level engagement, contributing to the
postponement of the Quad Leaders Summit.