April 9, 2022
2 mins read

White House denies ‘warning’ India

“President Biden believes our partnership with India is one of the most important relationships we have in the world,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said, reports Arul Louis

The White House has denied that US Deputy National Security Adviser Daleep Singh delivered a warning to India during his visit to New Delhi and characterised his interactions there as a “constructive conversation”.

US Deputy National Security Advisor Daleep Singh.(photo:@W7VOA /Twitter)

“I wouldn’t characterise it as a warning, nor did we at the time,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said on Friday when a reporter asserted that Singh had “delivered this warning to India to not raise purchases of Russian oil”.

“He went and had a constructive conversation and made clear that while it’s the decision of each individual country, including India, to determine whether they’re going to import Russian oil,” Psaki said.

“President (Joe) Biden believes our partnership with India is one of the most important relationships we have in the world.”

She reiterated clarifications that sanctions do not apply to oil purchases and about the size of oil purchases by India for a section of the US media that raises the imposition of sanctions against India while not bringing it up for European nations that buy far more energy resources from Russia.

“It is only 1 to 2 per cent of their imports. About 10 per cent of their imports is from the US.”

However, “he conveyed, of course, they should abide by sanctions, which are not related to that decision (on oil purchases) but also, we would be here to help them diversify and move towards even reducing further beyond the 1 to 2 per cent”, Psaki said.

Singh’s statement in New Delhi late last month that “there are consequences to countries that actively attempt to circumvent or backfill the sanctions” spawned headlines about “warning” and “threat” to India based on interpretations by some media.

But he also said during the same conversation with reporters: “I come here in a spirit of friendship to explain the mechanisms of our sanctions, the importance of joining us, to express a shared resolve and to advance shared interests.”

Singh, who is in charge of economic affairs in the US National Security Council, is Biden’s point person on sanctions imposed by the US on Russia.

The US has avoided imposing sanctions on energy purchases to accommodate its European allies who rely heavily on Russia.

Previous Story

Breather for Pak media

Next Story

Pinarayi, Stalin call for ‘truly federal India’

Latest from -Top News

India, UAE eye global projects

India and UAE step up partnership with third-country infrastructure ventures, a $100bn non-oil trade target, local currency trade, and collaboration in defence, aerospace, space, and technology. India and the United Arab Emirates

Saudi-Pak deal won’t dent India ties

Analysts emphasise that Saudi Arabia remains a key strategic and economic partner for India, with bilateral trade reaching $41.88 billion in FY 2024-25, far outpacing its $3–4 billion trade with Pakistan. India

Learning Forbidden

The imposition of what it called a “gender apartheid system”, one million Afghan girls remain locked out of classrooms as Taliban restrictions crush hopes, deny futures, and silence young voices yearning for

Stalin presses PM for fertilisers

MK Stalin presses PM Modi for fertiliser supplies, warns of disruption to farmers, while declaring Tamil Nadu a BJP ‘no-entry zone’ and vowing DMK’s 2026 victory. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Sisi, Blinken Discuss Gaza Crisis

Blinken commended Egypt’s role in promoting peace and expressed Washington’s

India, Australia hold top-level 2+2 dialogue in New Delhi

Australian High Commissioner to India, Philip Green OAM, said the