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US secy Scott Bessent ballistic over EU's trade deal with India, says ‘financing war against themselves' via Russian oil

"Just to be clear again, the Russian oil goes into India, the refined products come out, and the Europeans buy the refined products,” Scott Bessent said

Updated on: Jan 27, 2026 07:57 am IST
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Just as India and the European Union (EU) finalised their Free Trade Agreement in a big move to counter Donald Trump's tariff-driven trade policy, the US has doubled down on allegations that India's oil trade with Russia finances the war in EU-backed Ukraine.

US treasury secretary Scott Bessent has been critical of European and other leaders over their willingness to do business with India and China.(Reuters File Photo)

“We have put 25 per cent tariffs on India for buying Russian oil. Guess what happened last week? The Europeans signed a trade deal with India,” US treasury secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview on Sunday, US local time.

Follow live updates on the India-EU Summit and announcement of trade deal here.

The India-EU deal, it must be noted, has not yet been signed but was declared as "finalised for legal scrubbing of the text" in New Delhi on Monday.

The Trump administration has imposed 50 per cent tariffs on India, including 25 per cent over the issue of Russian oil.

Scott Bessent's theory on Russian oil

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who is currently in India and was a chief guest at the 77th Republic Day celebrations in New Delhi, termed the EU-India FTA as the “mother of all deals”.

Trump hails ‘historic ties’

Trump, meanwhile, sent out customary greetings on India's Republic Day.

“On behalf of the people of the United States, I extend my heartfelt congratulations to the government and people of India as you celebrate your 77th Republic Day. The United States and India share a historic bond as the world’s oldest and largest democracies,” Donald Trump said in remarks shared by the US embassy in India in a post on X.

‘Battling the White House’

This comes even as senator Ted Cruz of Trump's Republican Party reportedly said it's the White House that's been blocking a deal with India.

The purported leaked audios, reported by news outlet Axios, are Ted Cruz's phone calls with donors, in which he could be heard saying that he and several other Republicans tried to persuade Donald Trump not to impose tariffs on countries around the world in April last year.

It was during this announcement that Trump imposed 25% tariffs on India back in 2025, which he doubled to 50% months later in August citing Delhi's trade ties with Moscow.

“You're going to lose the House, you're going to lose the Senate, you're going to spend the next two years being impeached every single week,” Cruz reportedly told Trump against how the consequences of the tariffs could impact Americans.

Canada also pivoting to India

Besides the EU, even Canada is realigning its trade ties due to Trump's aggressive and expansionist tendencies.

Under Prime Minister Mark Carney, Ottawa is seeing a foreign policy recalibration by pivoting towards India as a primary strategic and economic partner. This is a direct response to threats from Donald Trump’s administration, which include a 35% tariff on Canadian goods and a potential 100% tariff if Canada is perceived as a "drop off port" for Chinese exports.

Seeking to shield its sovereignty and avoid being treated as a “51st state”, Ottawa is working towards doubling its non-US exports within ten years.

Both Canada and India currently face high US tariffs, a shared predicament that has accelerated their push for a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with a target of $50 billion in bilateral trade by 2030.

PM Carney is expected to visit India in March to sign deals focused on uranium, energy, minerals, and artificial intelligence.

This diplomatic thaw follows a period of Justin Trudeau-era diplomatic frost that was centred on friction regarding the killing of a Sikh separatist leader.

For Canada, India represents a stable democratic partner and a strategic counterweight to US dominance in the Indo-Pacific, analysts say.

India could view the partnership as an opportunity to secure vital energy inputs and expand its reach into the North American market at a time when its own exports are under significant US tariff pressure.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Aarish Chhabra

Aarish Chhabra is an Associate Editor with the Hindustan Times online team, writing news reports and explanatory articles, besides overseeing coverage for the website. His career spans nearly two decades across India's most respected newsrooms in print, digital, and broadcast. He has reported, written, and edited across formats — from breaking news and live election coverage, to analytical long-reads and cultural commentary — building a body of work that reflects both editorial rigour and a deep curiosity about the society he writes for. Aarish studied English literature, sociology and history, besides journalism, at Panjab University, Chandigarh, and started his career in that city, eventually moving to Delhi. He is also the author of ‘The Big Small Town: How Life Looks from Chandigarh’, a collection of critical essays originally serialised as a weekly column in the Hindustan Times, examining the culture and politics of a city that is far more than its famous architecture — and, in doing so, holding up a mirror to modern India. In stints at the BBC, The Indian Express, NDTV, and Jagran New Media, he worked across formats and languages; mainly English, also Hindi and Punjabi. He was part of the crack team for the BBC Explainer project replicated across the world by the broadcaster. At Jagran, he developed editorial guides and trained journalists on integrity and content quality. He has also worked at the intersection of journalism and education. At the Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad, he developed a website that simplified academic research in management. At Bennett University's Times School of Media in Noida, he taught students the craft of digital journalism: from newsgathering and writing, to social media strategy and video storytelling. Having moved from a small town to a bigger town to a mega city for education and work, his intellectual passions lie at the intersection of society, politics, and popular culture — a perspective that informs both his writing and his view of the world. When not working, he is constantly reading long-form journalism or watching brainrot content, sometimes both at the same time.

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