Trump’s TACO U-Turn: Not an Off-Ramp, Just a Pause

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Donald Trump has once again played his favorite game with India – blow hot, blow cold, and then pretend nothing happened. Within weeks, he went from imposing brutal 25% tariffs as punitive sanctions on Indian exports to calling PM Modi a “great friend.”

The latest statement by Trump isn’t an off-ramp, it isn’t reconciliation – it’s a Classic TACO Move!

The image is a collage of three distinct sections. The top left features a close-up of Vladimir Putin, the top right shows Donald Trump at a podium with a speech bubble saying "Two more weeks!", and the bottom section depicts a nighttime scene of a building engulfed in flames, likely representing a protest or riot. The text overlay in the bottom left reads "TACO!", which stands for "Trump Always Chickens Out", a satirical acronym used to criticize Trump's perceived weakness and corruption. This image is used to draw a parallel between Trump and Putin, suggesting that both leaders bully the weak but retreat when faced with significant opposition. The fiery scene at the bottom symbolizes chaos or unrest, possibly linked to political turmoil during Trump's presidency.
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A term used by Western media – TACO – means Trump Always Chicken Out! This move is Trump in his purest form: unpredictable, tactical, and always desperate to prove he’s the alpha. But this time, India refused to play the role of the junior partner. What the world witnessed was not de-escalation. It was simply a pause in Trump’s political theater.

Tariffs That Cut Deep – And Why India Didn’t Blink

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When Trump slapped the extra punitive 25% tariffs on Indian exports, he used Russia as an excuse. Washington accused India of running a “laundromat” for Russian crude. They said India fuelled the Ukraine War by buying cheap oil, refining it, and selling it to the global market. They stated that India was enriching Moscow, while Ukraine bought 15% of refined Russian Oil from India, and the EU bought most of the refined Russian natural gas.

Trump used Russia-Ukraine as an excuse to weaponize tariffs, hoping to force India to break down during trade negotiations.

It was economic strong-arming dressed up as morality.

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But India stood firm. It reminded the US that energy security for 1.4 billion people could not be compromised to please Washington’s sanctions playbook. New Delhi didn’t flinch. It didn’t cut Russian oil imports. It didn’t cave to Trump and his boys. Instead, India showed a quiet defiance – choosing sovereignty over short-term appeasement.

Trump’s Media Wolves and Manufactured Villainy

Trump 2.0 didn’t stop at tariffs. He unleashed his pack of “mad wolves”—Peter Navarro, Lutnick, Vance, Hegeseth, and others. These “gentlemen” went on a coordinated rampage in the media. Suddenly, India was painted as every villain in the book:

The image is a screenshot of a tweet from Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) on X, featuring his profile picture with an American flag and a heart emoji. The tweet, dated 7/31/25 at 9:30 AM, contains text criticizing India and Russia\'s economic ties, U.S. tariffs, and referencing Dmitry Medvedev. The post has 570 retweets and 2.01K likes, displayed below the text. The composition is standard for a social media screenshot, with the user\'s handle, timestamp, and engagement metrics visible. Shubhangi Sharma\'s reply post, criticizing Trump\'s statement and its impact on India-US relations, provides context for the image\'s significance in diplomatic and economic discussions.
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  • Kermlin’s Laundromat
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  • A nation run by “Brahmin profiteers”

  • Ukraine suffers due to Modi’s War

Each insult was carefully calibrated to sting. Additionally, they resonated with the Indian Opposition’s claims regarding Modi 3.0! Hence, these words weren’t just economic criticism. Instead, they were an attempt to start a regime change to get their way. Moreover, they were a way to delegitimize India’s political and social standing on the global stage.

Howard Lutnick, wearing a dark suit and purple tie, gesturing with both hands while speaking. A red TOI Games watermark is visible in the bottom right corner.
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The Trump administration canceled a planned trade delegation to Delhi, sending a clear message: no deal until you bend.

Trump even hinted at skipping the QUAD summit to be held in New Delhi. This was a not-so-subtle threat that Washington would bow out of anything related to India. Right after the SCO Summit in Tianjin, Trump went feral on his social media platform. On Truth Social, he ranted about “losing India and Russia to China.” The message was designed for domestic optics, but also a blunt warning that America would play rough.

Donald J. Trump, Vladimir Putin, and Xi Jinping walking side by side in a hallway. The hallway has pink lighting and ornate door frames. Devendra Pratap Pandey is not visible.
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It was pressure politics at its ugliest.

The Sudden Sweet Talk – A Classic TACO Pivot

Just like every media outlet predicts, Trump did a TACO! He changed his tune within 24 hours after sounding like a jilted lover. His latest media byte shows him declaring that India and the U.S. were “fine,” and Modi was his “good friend.”

Overnight, the American wolf had turned into a smiling Labrador!

A tweet screenshot with Narendra Modi\'s profile picture and name at the top left. The text includes Narendra Modi\'s statement appreciating President Trump\'s sentiments and mentioning the India-US partnership. Mentions of @realDonaldTrump and @POTUS are visible in blue hyperlinks below the text.
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PM Modi responded with his trademark composure: a cordial acknowledgment, a polite thank-you. Along came a diplomatic response that reiterated how India values good cooperation and partnership with the USA. The exchange looked warm, but scratched the surface, and it was nothing but optics.

Why the sudden pivot? Because Trump overplayed his hand.

India didn’t retaliate with equal venom and didn’t engage in name-calling. It didn’t storm out of negotiations. Instead, New Delhi sat tight and made its moves quietly. PM Modi let Trump stew in his own overreaction while India signed MoUs with Japan and the EU. Once Trump realized his bullying hadn’t broken India’s resolve, he reached for the easy escape – friendly words with zero substance.

This wasn’t diplomacy – It was damage control.

India’s Calm Defiance – Strategy, Not Surrender

India’s response is what truly rattled Washington. Instead of knee-jerk reactions, India played the long game:

  • Bharat announced many MoUs to secure new markets from MERCOSUR to MENA, and from Japan to EU.
  • India refused to be cowed into rejecting oil trade with Russia; instead, Putin gave a 5% discount to India to offset USA’s Tariff Tantrum.
  • PM Modi sent clear signals of independence at the SCO summit – meeting Xi and Putin in Tianjin but refusing to attend its military parade.

This was balanced at its best. India showed it could engage Moscow, Beijing, and Washington on its own terms. It refused to let itself be boxed into anyone’s camp. Most importantly, it didn’t allow Trump’s verbal diarrhea to dictate policy. Trump may thrive on chaos, but PM Modi thrives on calm. That contrast has become the defining feature of U.S.–India relations.

Why This Is Not an Off-Ramp

Here’s the blunt truth: nothing has changed. Tariffs still stand. More sanctions still loom ahead for Indian as Trump continues to weaponize tariffs for the world. American distrust of India’s Russia ties hasn’t softened. Hence, Trump’s words of friendship were cheap insurance against his own overreach. An off-ramp implies de-escalation, compromise, and a genuine path forward. This was none of that. It was another one of Trump’s moments of madness.

Trump talks tough, escalates wildly, then retreats without embarrassment just enough to save face, without fixing the mess he created.

The real reset will only come when Washington accepts India’s role as an autonomous power in a multipolar world. Moreover, the true off-ramp shall come when trade negotiations are restarted with Trump 2.0! The relationship shall be good only when India stops being held hostage to America’s insecurities about Russia or China. Until then, every “friendship tweet” from Trump is just noise.

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