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Harris says Trump ‘is a fascist’ after John Kelly says he wanted generals like Hitler’s

Update Harris says Trump ‘is a fascist’ after John Kelly says he wanted generals like Hitler’s
Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump shows videos of US Vice President and democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris during a campaign event at Gas South Arena in Duluth, Georgia, on October 23, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 24 October 2024

Harris says Trump ‘is a fascist’ after John Kelly says he wanted generals like Hitler’s

Harris says Trump ‘is a fascist’ after John Kelly says he wanted generals like Hitler’s
  • John Kelly, a retired general, warned in interviews that Trump meets the definition of a fascist and that while in office he suggested that Hitler “did some good things”
  • Harris, the vice president and Democratic nominee, repeated her increasingly dire warnings about Trump’s mental fitness and his intentions for the presidency

ASTON, Pennsylvania: Vice President Kamala Harris said Wednesday that she believes that Donald Trump “is a fascist” after his longest-serving chief of staff said the former president praised Adolf Hitler while in office and put personal loyalty above the Constitution.
Harris seized on comments by former chief of staff John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, about his former boss in interviews with The New York Times and The Atlantic published Tuesday warning that the Republican nominee meets the definition of a fascist and that while in office he suggested that the Nazi leader “did some good things.”
Speaking at a CNN town hall, Harris said they offer a window into who the former president “really is” and the kind of commander in chief he would be.
When asked if she believed that Trump is a fascist, Harris replied twice, “Yes, I do.” Later, she brought it up herself, saying Trump would, if elected again, be “a president who admires dictators and is a fascist.”
The Democratic presidential nominee said Kelly’s comments, less than two weeks before voters will decide whether to send Trump back to the Oval Office, were a “911 call to the American people” by the former chief of staff. They were quickly seized by Harris as part of her closing message to voters as she works to sharpen the choice at the ballot box for Americans.
“I believe Donald Trump is a danger to the well-being and security of the United States of America,” she said, saying the American people deserve a president who maintains “certain standards,” which include “certainly not comparing oneself, in a clearly admiring way, to Hitler.”
She added that if reelected, Trump would no longer be tempered by people who would “restrain him” from his worst impulses.
Earlier Wednesday, Harris repeated her increasingly dire warnings about Trump’s mental fitness and his intentions for the presidency.
“This is a window into who Donald Trump really is, from the people who know him best, from the people who have worked with him side by side in the Oval Office and in the Situation Room,” Harris told reporters outside the vice president’s residence in Washington.

The comments from Kelly, the retired Marine general who worked for Trump in the White House from 2017 to 2019, built on past warnings from former top Trump officials as the election enters its final two weeks.
Kelly has long been critical of Trump and previously accused him of calling veterans killed in combat “suckers” and “losers.” His new warnings emerged as Trump seeks a second term vowing to dramatically expand his use of the military at home and suggesting he would use force to go after Americans he considers “enemies from within.”
“He commented more than once that, ‘You know, Hitler did some good things, too,’” Kelly recalled to the Times. Kelly said he would usually quash the conversation by saying “nothing (Hitler) did, you could argue, was good,” but Trump would occasionally bring up the topic again.
In his interview with The Atlantic, Kelly recalled that when Trump raised the idea of needing “German generals,” Kelly would ask if he meant “Bismarck’s generals,” referring to Otto von Bismarck, the chancellor who oversaw the unification of Germany. “Surely you can’t mean Hitler’s generals,” Kelly recalled asking Trump. To which the former president responded, “Yeah, yeah, Hitler’s generals.”
Trump said on his Truth Social media platform that Kelly had “made up a story” and went on to heap insults on his former chief of staff, including that Kelly’s “toughness morphed into weakness.”
Trump’s campaign also denied the accounts. Campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said Kelly had “beclowned himself with these debunked stories he has fabricated” and, after Harris’ statement, accused the Democratic candidate of sharing “outright lies and falsehoods.”
Chris Sununu, New Hampshire’s Republican governor and onetime Trump critic, said Kelly’s comments did not change his plans to vote for the former president.
“Look, we’ve heard a lot of extreme things about Donald Trump, from Donald Trump. It’s really par for the course,” the governor told CNN. “Unfortunately, with a guy like that, it’s kind of baked into the vote at this point.”
Some of the former president’s supporters in swing states responded to Kelly’s comments with a shrug.
“Trump did his four years, and we were in great shape. Kelly didn’t have anything good to say about Trump. He ought to have his butt kicked,” said Jim Lytner, a longtime advocate for veterans in Nevada who served in the Army in Vietnam and co-founded the nonprofit Veterans Transition Resource Center.
Harris said Wednesday that Trump admired Hitler’s generals because he “does not want a military that is loyal to the United States Constitution, he wants a military that is loyal to him. He wants a military who will be loyal to him personally.”
Polls show the race is tight in swing states, and both Trump and Harris are crisscrossing the country making their final pitches to the sliver of undecided voters. Harris’ campaign has spent considerable time reaching out to independent voters, using the support of longtime Republicans such as former Rep. Liz Cheney and comments like Kelly’s to urge past Trump voters to reject his candidacy in November.
Harris’ campaign held a call with reporters Tuesday to elevate the voices of retired military officials who highlighted how many of the officials who worked with Trump now oppose his campaign.
“People that know him best are most opposed to him, his presidency,” said retired Army Brig. Gen. Steve Anderson.
Anderson said he wished Kelly would fully back Harris over Trump, something he has yet to do. But retired Army Reserve Col. Kevin Carroll, a former senior counselor to Kelly, said Wednesday that the former top Trump official would “rather chew broken glass than vote for Donald Trump.”
Before serving as Trump’s chief of staff, Kelly worked as the former president’s secretary of homeland security, where he oversaw Trump’s attempts to build a wall along the US-Mexico border. Kelly was also at the forefront of the administration’s crackdown in immigration policy that led to the separation of thousands of immigrant parents and their children along the southern border. Those actions made him a villain to many on the left, including Harris.
After Kelly left the Trump administration and joined the board of a company operating the nation’s largest detention center for unaccompanied migrant children, Harris wrote during her 2019 run for president that he was “the architect” of the administration’s “cruel child separation policy. Now he will profit off the separation of families. It’s unethical. We are better than this.”
When she was in Miami for a primary debate in June 2019, Harris was also one of a dozen Democratic presidential candidates who visited the detention center south of the city and protested against the administration’s harsh treatment of young migrants.
In his interview with the Times, Kelly also said Trump met the definition of a fascist. After reading the definition aloud, including that fascism was “a far-right authoritarian, ultranationalist political ideology and movement characterized by a dictatorial leader,” Kelly concluded Trump “certainly falls into the general definition of fascist, for sure.”
Kelly added that Trump often fumed at any attempt to constrain his power, and that “he would love to be” a dictator.
“He certainly prefers the dictator approach to government,” Kelly told the Times, adding later, “I think he’d love to be just like he was in business — he could tell people to do things and they would do it, and not really bother too much about whether what the legalities were and whatnot.”
Kelly is not the first former top Trump administration official to cast the former president as a threat.
Retired Army Gen. Mark A. Milley, who served as Trump’s chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Bob Woodward in his recent book “War” that Trump was “fascist to the core” and “the most dangerous person to this country.” And retired Gen. Jim Mattis, who worked as secretary of defense under Trump, reportedly later told Woodward that he agreed with Milley’s assessment.
Throughout Trump’s political rise, the businessman-turned-politician benefited from the support of military veterans.
AP VoteCast found that about 6 in 10 military veterans said they voted for Trump in 2020, as did just over half of those with a veteran in the household. Among voters in this year’s South Carolina Republican primary, AP VoteCast found that close to two-thirds of military veterans and people in veteran households voted for Trump over former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Trump’s toughest opponent in the 2024 Republican primary.


Pro-Palestine protesters in Ireland, Northern Ireland call for boycott of Israeli goods

Pro-Palestine protesters in Ireland, Northern Ireland call for boycott of Israeli goods
Updated 12 sec ago

Pro-Palestine protesters in Ireland, Northern Ireland call for boycott of Israeli goods

Pro-Palestine protesters in Ireland, Northern Ireland call for boycott of Israeli goods
  • Thousands march through Belfast, chant outside Starbucks, Barclays, Axa
  • Rallygoers in Dublin march from US Embassy to Department of Foreign Affairs

LONDON: Thousands of pro-Palestine demonstrators held a rally in Belfast, Northern Ireland on Saturday to protest against businesses that have ties to Israel, .

Protesters marched through the city center, stopping and chanting outside Starbucks, Barclays, insurance company Axa and Leonardo Hotels. The companies are accused of complicity in a genocide against Palestinians in Gaza as a result of having extensive business ties with Israel.

At the end of the march, outside the BBC Northern Ireland offices, the demonstrators called on the public to boycott Israeli products, including those from pharmaceutical giant Teva, from Sept. 18.

Meanwhile, protests were also held across Ireland, including in the capital, Dublin, and Cork, Galway, Limerick, Waterford, Carlow and Navan.

In Dublin rallygoers marched from the US Embassy to the Department of Foreign Affairs.

The protests were organized by the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign, which has led efforts to boycott Israeli products in the country.

Rossa Coyle of the IPSC, speaking in Belfast, urged the public to boycott Caterpillar, the equipment manufacturer that has provided the Israeli military with excavators used in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, and Teva.

“Ask your GPs, ask your pharmacist to mark your records ‘no Teva products,’” she said.

Organizers hope to popularize a three-day boycott of Israeli goods from Sept. 18.

Patricia McKeown of Trade Union Friends of Palestine said that pro-Palestine groups across Ireland were redoubling their efforts.

“Trade Union Friends of Palestine across Ireland and the Irish Congress of Trade Unions have been in emergency meetings with BDS (advocacy group Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions), with its European coordinators, to look at what call for action we are making to intensify what is already being done on the ground,” she said.

“There are workers across the island refusing to handle Israeli products, goods and services.

“Starting on Sept. 18, from that day onward, we want workers to refuse to handle any Israeli goods or services they are engaged with in whatever type of place they work in.

“That might be the public service and the civil service, that might be the health service, that might be education, that is definitely industry, that is definitely retail.

“We are pledging to stand by those workers as they take action by their refusal.”

Dr. Ashraf Habouharb, a Palestinian living in Belfast, addressed the rally in the city and praised the protesters.

“I’m extremely delighted to see you in this big number and large crowd coming today, raising your voice and declaring that enough is enough,” he said.

“This has been the largest crowd for many, many, many weeks and you are responding to what’s happening.

“What else needs to happen for the international community and world leaders, especially the Western leaders, to make an action to do something trying to stop this genocide?”


Police detain London demonstrators supporting banned group Palestine Action

Police detain London demonstrators supporting banned group Palestine Action
Updated 21 min 53 sec ago

Police detain London demonstrators supporting banned group Palestine Action

Police detain London demonstrators supporting banned group Palestine Action
  • Defend Our Juries, the campaign group organizing the protest, said 1,500 people were taking part, holding signs reading “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action”
  • More than 700 people were arrested at earlier protests, and 138 have been charged under the Terrorism Act

LONDON: Police on Saturday arrested some of the hundreds of protesters who gathered outside Parliament in London on Saturday to defy a ban on the group Palestine Action, which has been deemed a terrorist organization by the government.

Defend Our Juries, the campaign group organizing the protest, said 1,500 people were taking part, holding signs reading “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action.”

Within minutes, police began arresting the demonstrators, as bystanders chanted “Shame on you” and “Met Police, pick a side, justice or genocide.” There were scuffles and angry exchanges as officers dragged away demonstrators who went limp as they were removed from the crowd.

“Expressing support for a proscribed organization is a criminal offense under the Terrorism Act,” the Metropolitan Police force said on social media. “Where our officers see offenses, we will make arrests.”

More than 700 people were arrested at earlier protests, and 138 have been charged under the Terrorism Act.

Mike Higgins, 62, who is blind and uses a wheelchair, was arrested last month but returned to demonstrate on Saturday.

“And I’m a terrorist? That’s the joke of it,” he said. “I’ve already been arrested under the Terrorism Act and I suspect I will be today.

“Of course I’ll keep coming back. What choice do I have?”

Direct action protests

The government proscribed Palestine Action in July after activists broke into a Royal Air Force base and vandalized planes to protest against what they called Britain’s support for Israel’s offensive against Hamas in Gaza. The activists sprayed red paint into the engines of two tanker planes and caused further damage with crowbars.

Proscription made it a crime to publicly support the organization. Membership of, or support for, the group is punishable by up to 14 years in prison.

Palestine Action has carried out direct action protests in the UK since it formed in 2020, including breaking into facilities owned by Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems UK, and has targeted other sites in Britain that participants believe have links with the Israeli military.

The group has targeted defense companies and national infrastructure, and officials say their actions have caused millions of pounds in damage that affect national security.

Banning the group, then-Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said, “The assessments are very clear, this is not a nonviolent organization.”

Palestine Action has won approval from the High Court to challenge the ban, a ruling the government is seeking to overturn. The case is ongoing, with a hearing scheduled for Sept. 25.

Supporters say the ban stifles free speech

The UN human rights chief has criticized the British government’s stance, saying the new law “misuses the gravity and impact of terrorism.”

The decision to designate Palestine Action as a terrorist group “raises serious concerns that counterterrorism laws are being applied to conduct that is not terrorist in nature, and risks hindering the legitimate exercise of fundamental freedoms across the UK,” Volker Türk warned.

He added that according to international standards, terrorist acts should be confined to crimes such as those intended to cause death or serious injury or the taking of hostages.

Huda Ammori, Palestine Action’s co-founder, has condemned the government’s decision to ban it as “catastrophic” for civil liberties, leading to a “much wider chilling effect on freedom of speech.”

The group has been supported by prominent cultural figures including bestselling Irish author Sally Rooney, who said she planned to use the proceeds of her work “to keep backing Palestine Action and direct action against genocide.”

Israel — founded in part as a refuge in the wake of the Holocaust, when some 6 million European Jews were murdered — vehemently denies it is committing genocide.

Britain’s government stressed that proscribing Palestine Action as a terrorist group does not affect other lawful groups — including pro-Palestinian or pro-Israel voices — campaigning or peacefully protesting.


Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware

Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware
Updated 06 September 2025

Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware

Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware
  • The Joe and Jill Biden Foundation this past week approved a 13-person governance board that is charged with steering the project
  • The cost of presidential libraries has soared over the decades

WASHINGTON: Former President Joe Biden has decided to build his presidential library in Delaware and has tapped a group of former aides, friends and political allies to begin the heavy lift of fundraising and finding a site for the museum and archive.
The Joe and Jill Biden Foundation this past week approved a 13-person governance board that is charged with steering the project. The board includes former Secretary of State Antony Blinken, longtime adviser Steve Ricchetti, prolific Democratic fundraiser Rufus Gifford and others with deep ties to the one-term president and his wife.
Biden’s library team has the daunting task of raising money for the 46th president’s legacy project at a moment when his party has become fragmented about the way ahead and many big Democratic donors have stopped writing checks.
It also remains to be seen whether corporations and institutional donors that have historically donated to presidential library projects — regardless of the party of the former president — will be more hesitant to contribute, with President Donald Trumpmaligning Biden on a daily basis and savaging groups he deems left-leaning.
The political climate has changed
“There’s certainly folks — folks who may have been not thinking about those kinds of issues who are starting to think about them,” Gifford, who was named chairman of the library board, told The Associated Press. “That being said ... we’re not going to create a budget, we’re not going to set a goal for ourselves that we don’t believe we can hit.”
The cost of presidential libraries has soared over the decades.
The George H.W. Bush library’s construction cost came in at about $43 million when it opened in 1997. Bill Clinton’s cost about $165 million. George W. Bush’s team met its $500 million fundraising goal before the library was dedicated.
The Obama Foundation has set a whopping $1.6 billion fundraising goal for construction, sustaining global programming and seeding an endowment for the Chicago presidential center that is slated to open next year.
Biden’s library team is still in the early stages of planning, but Gifford predicted that the cost of the project would probably “end up somewhere in the middle” of the Obama Presidential Center and the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.
Biden advisers have met with officials operating 12 of the 13 presidential libraries with a bricks and mortar presence that the National Archives and Records Administration manages. (They skipped the Herbert Hoover library in Iowa, which is closed for renovations). They’ve also met Obama library officials to discuss programming and location considerations and have begun talks with Delaware leaders to assess potential partnerships.
Private money builds them
Construction and support for programming for the libraries are paid for with private funds donated to the nonprofit organizations established by the former president.
The initial vision is for the Biden library to include an immersive museum detailing Biden’s four years in office.
The Bidens also want it to be a hub for leadership, service and civic engagement that will include educational and event space to host policy gatherings.
Biden, who ended his bid for a second White House term 107 days before last year’s election, has been relatively slow to move on presidential library planning compared with most of his recent predecessors.
Clinton announced Little Rock, Arkansas, would host his library weeks into his second term. Barack Obama selected Jackson Park on Chicago’s South Side as the site for his presidential center before he left office, and George W. Bush selected Southern Methodist University in Dallas before finishing his second term.
One-termer George H.W. Bush announced in 1991, more than a year before he would lose his reelection bid, that he would establish his presidential library at Texas A&M University after he left office.
Trump taps legal settlements for his
Trump was mostly quiet about plans for a presidential library after losing to Biden in 2020 and has remained so since his return to the White House this year. But the Republican has won millions of dollars in lawsuits against Paramount Global, ABC News, Meta and X in which parts of those settlements are directed for a future Trump library.
Trump has also accepted a free Air Force One replacement from the Qatar government. He says the $400 million plane would be donated to his future presidential library, similar to how the Boeing 707 used by President Ronald Reagan was decommissioned and put on display as a museum piece, once he leaves office.
Others named to Biden’s library board are former senior White House aides Elizabeth Alexander, Julissa Reynoso Pantaleón and Cedric Richmond; David Cohen, a former ambassador to Canada and telecom executive; Tatiana Brandt Copeland, a Delaware philanthropist; Jeff Peck, Biden Foundation treasurer and former Senate aide; Fred C. Sears II, Biden’s longtime friend; former Labor Secretary Marty Walsh; former Office of Management and Budget director Shalanda Young; and former Delaware Gov. Jack Markell.
Biden has deep ties to Pennsylvania but ultimately settled on Delaware, the state that was the launching pad for his political career. He was first elected to the New Castle County Council in 1970 and spent 36 years representing Delaware in the Senate before serving as Obama’s vice president.
The president was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he lived until age 10. He left when his father, struggling to make ends meet, moved the family to Delaware after landing a job there selling cars.
Working-class Scranton became a touchstone in Biden’s political narrative during his long political career. He also served as a professor at the University of Pennsylvania after his vice presidency, leading a center on diplomacy and global engagement at the school named after him.
Gifford said ultimately the Bidens felt that Delaware was where the library should be because the state has “propelled his entire political career.”
Elected officials in Delaware are cheering Biden’s move.
“To Delaware, he will always be our favorite son,” Gov. Matt Meyer said. “The new presidential library here in Delaware will give future generations the chance to see his story of resilience, family, and never forgetting your roots.”


Israel’s biggest arms producer closes UK factory targeted by Palestine Action: Report

Israel’s biggest arms producer closes UK factory targeted by Palestine Action: Report
Updated 06 September 2025

Israel’s biggest arms producer closes UK factory targeted by Palestine Action: Report

Israel’s biggest arms producer closes UK factory targeted by Palestine Action: Report
  • Bristol site of Elbit Systems appeared deserted during visit by The Guardian newspaper
  • Global arms trade expert describes closure as ‘extremely significant’

London: The British factory of a major Israeli weapons manufacturer has apparently closed after being repeatedly targeted by Palestine Action, The Guardian reported on Saturday.

Elbit Systems UK has held the lease on the site in Bristol’s Aztec West business park since 2019, and it was not due to expire until 2029.

The factory was targeted by dozens of protests by the banned group Palestine Action, involving demonstrators locking themselves to hinges, climbing on the roof, smashing windows and spraying red paint across the site.

Elbit Systems UK is a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, Israel’s biggest producer of weapons that reported revenues of $6.8 billion last year.

The firm describes itself as the “backbone” of the Israeli military’s drone fleet, which has been deployed extensively in Gaza. Elbit also produces parts and systems for jets, helicopters, naval drones and land vehicles.

The Guardian visited the Bristol factory of its UK subsidiary this week but found the site deserted.

The subsidiary did not respond to a request for comment by the newspaper, which reported that no staff were present at the site aside from a lone security guard outside the premises.

A separate Elbit facility in Bristol, located in Filton, was also targeted by Palestine Action, with 24 of the group’s members awaiting trial on charges relating to protests against the site.

These include criminal damage, violent disorder and aggravated burglary. One person has also been charged with grievous bodily harm with intent.

The latest accounts from Elbit System UK show that the subsidiary reported an operating loss of $6.3 million last year, compared to a profit of $5.1 million in 2023.

In 2024, the British operation sold its West Midlands-based subsidiary Elite KL, which suffered a 75 percent plunge in operating profit in 2022, citing increased security costs at one of its sites as a result of Palestine Action protests.

Elite KL rebranded to Calatherm under an arranged buyout, and the new firm has pledged to avoid any association with Elbit and cancel its defense contracts.

In 2022, Elbit sold Oldham-based Ferranti P&C after its site was targeted by 18 months of protests led by Palestine Action.

Private Eye, the current affairs magazine, revealed last month that Elbit Systems UK was part of a consortium targeting a $2.7 billion contract to become a “strategic partner” of the UK Ministry of Defence.

Peter Hain, a former government minister, wrote to Defense Minister Jon Healey in protest against granting the contract given the “devastation unfolding in Gaza,” the Financial Times reported.

Global arms trade expert Andrew Feinstein said the closure of Elbit’s Bristol site is “extremely significant,” adding: “We need to remind ourselves that Elbit is one of the two most important Israeli arms firms, along with Israel Aerospace Industries, and that it is obviously a key component of Israel’s military industrial complex.”


Modi says relations with US ‘very positive’ after ties sour following Trump’s tariffs

Modi says relations with US ‘very positive’ after ties sour following Trump’s tariffs
Updated 06 September 2025

Modi says relations with US ‘very positive’ after ties sour following Trump’s tariffs

Modi says relations with US ‘very positive’ after ties sour following Trump’s tariffs
  • PM’s statement comes after Trump says the two leaders ‘will always be friends’
  • New Delhi estimates US levies will impact $48.2bn worth of Indian exports

New Delhi: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Saturday that New Delhi’s ties with Washington are still “very positive” as US President Donald Trump’s imposition of steep tariffs on Indian exports puts a strain on relations between the two countries.

Last month, the US hiked the total duty on Indian exports to 50 percent in retaliation over India’s continued purchases of Russian oil. That is the highest level in Asia and one of the highest ever imposed on a major trading partner by an American administration. 

Trump’s tariffs, part of his escalating global trade war, have caused a rift in India-US ties after years of strong bonds between the two leaders going back to the US president’s first term. 

“India and the US have a very positive and forward-looking Comprehensive and Global Strategic Partnership,” Modi wrote on X, adding: “(I) deeply appreciate and fully reciprocate President Trump’s sentiments and positive assessment of our ties.” 

His statement followed Trump’s earlier remarks to reporters in Washington, where he said that he would “always be friends” with Modi. 

“India and the United States have a special relationship. There is nothing to worry about,” Trump said. 

India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said Modi attaches “enormous importance” to New Delhi’s partnership with the US. 

“He has always had a very good personal (relationship) with President Trump. But the point is that we remain engaged with the US,” Jaishankar told Indian news agency ANI on Saturday, indicating that the door is still open to continue trade negotiations. 

India is bracing for the impacts of US tariffs, which New Delhi estimates will hit $48.2 billion worth of exports, with the Global Trade Research Initiative saying the levies could reduce Indian GDP by up to 0.9 of a percentage point.

There have been increasing calls in the world’s most populous country in recent weeks for a boycott of US brands, as Modi urged Indians to use “Swadeshi” — goods made in India. 

Modi and Trump’s statements indicate that “both sides want to resolve outstanding issues” and “haven’t given up on each other,” Pranay Kotasthane, deputy director of the Takshashila Institution, an independent public policy center, told Arab News.

“But this yo-yoing will likely continue in the Trump administration,” he continued. “The volatility in the US will continue to affect its international relationships. Stability is the exception, not the norm.”

Mohan Guruswamy, a Delhi-based foreign policy expert, said Modi’s reaction to Trump’s recent remarks was “excessive,” noting that the tariffs still stand. 

“Whether the tariff rate is brought down is the issue … The tariff is still there, (Trump’s) cabinet ministers, (Trump’s senior counselor for trade and manufacturing, Peter) Navarro and others have called India all kinds of names. That is the official position. That has not been withdrawn,” he told Arab News. 

Navarro has accused India of “helping feed the Russian war machine” and profiting from Moscow’s war in Ukraine. 

“I think (the government is) desperate. They don’t have a sense of self-respect and shame,” Guruswamy said. “Lack of respect for India is increasing. Respect would be increased if you didn’t react hastily.”

Sanjay Kapoor, an analyst and political editor, believes it unlikely that Washington will reduce its steep tariffs on Indian goods. 

“There’s obviously an attempt to show that a hostile trade policy doesn’t mean spoilt ties,” he told Arab News. “But now Trump has weaponized tariffs to suggest that the trade policy encompasses foreign policy too.”