‘Modi Has Our Full Support’ to ‘They’ll Sort It Out’: Trump’s Hypocrisy on India-Pakistan Tensions
When Terror Strikes, Trump Talks Big — But Acts Small
After the horrific terrorist attack in Pahalgam, US President Donald Trump did what he does best — deliver a bold, headline-grabbing statement:
“Modi has our full support.”
It sounded powerful. Reassuring. Like a friend standing firm.
But only days later, the tone shifted dramatically:
“There’s great tension between Pakistan and India, but there always has been. They’ll figure it out one way or another.”
Wait… what?
So, is Trump standing with India, or stepping aside? The contradiction isn’t new — it’s a pattern. And it reflects not just rhetorical inconsistency but also a deep-rooted hypocrisy in how Trump views India: as a transactional partner, not a strategic ally.
The Flip-Flop Formula: From Support to Shrug
Let’s decode the pattern:
- During crises like the Pahalgam attack or border skirmishes, Trump issues strong pro-India statements, praises Modi, and talks “full support.”
- But as tensions de-escalate, or when Pakistan’s involvement complicates global diplomacy, he quickly shifts to neutrality: “They’ll figure it out.”
This is not diplomatic balancing — it’s calculated convenience.
Trade Over Trust: The Apple, Tariffs & Tech Tango
Trump’s duplicity with India extends far beyond geopolitics.
- He’s threatened India with tariffs on tech, medical devices, and agriculture.
- Simultaneously, he’s pressured Apple to shift production to India, praising India’s “cheap labor” and “business potential.”
So when it’s about economic gain, he’s India’s cheerleader.
But when it’s about moral responsibility or standing against terrorism, he turns into a bystander.
That’s not foreign policy. That’s deal-making diplomacy.
Does Trump Play Favorites? Absolutely.
Let’s compare:
- Israel: Full-throated support. Embassy moved to Jerusalem.
- Ukraine: Military aid, weapons, and international pressure on Russia.
- India: Big talk, minimal action. Silence on Kashmir. Shrug at cross-border terror.
India is treated less like a trusted ally and more like an expendable side character in Trump’s global PR game.
Why the Double Standards?
Because for Trump, India is:
- A market for American goods.
- A backup manufacturing base when China falters.
- A tool for optics — useful for tweets and headlines, not for real strategy.
He’ll praise India if it helps swing votes among Indian-Americans in New Jersey or Texas. But when it’s time to take a stand — against Pakistan, for example — he chooses silence.
Why?
Because for Trump, “America First” always comes before “India Matters.”
Should India Be Cautious? Absolutely.
India must recognize that support from the US — especially under Trump — is not ideological. It’s transactional.
We need to ask:
- Are we just a low-cost alternative to China?
- Are we a market to offload American tech and pharma?
- Or are we truly a strategic ally deserving consistent, credible support?
Because right now, the signs suggest the former — not the latter.
Conclusion: Time to Read Between the Lines
Trump’s changing tones — from “Modi is my friend” to “they’ll figure it out” — reflect more than diplomacy. They reveal a pattern of political hypocrisy, where India is praised when convenient and ignored when inconvenient.
Friendship shouldn’t be based on headlines. It should be based on conviction.
Until India redefines its relationship beyond optics and trade talk, we risk being used, not valued.