India’s Modi seeks closer ties on Asia tour to offset fallout from US tariffs

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FILE PHOTO: India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses the nation during Independence Day celebrations at the historic Red Fort in Delhi, India, August 15, 2025. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain/File Photo

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hopes to boost support for his flagship Make in India initiative, mainly from Japan.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi heads overseas on Aug 28 to meet the leaders of China, Japan and Russia, seeking to build closer diplomatic ties as New Delhi battles the fallout from US President Donald Trump’s escalating tariff offensive.

By drawing nearer to some of the world’s largest economies, including his first visit to China in seven years, Mr Modi hopes to boost support for his flagship Make in India initiative, mainly from Japan, as Mr Trump’s measures spur new partnerships.

“This will be an opportunity to launch several new initiatives to build greater resilience in the relationship, and to respond to emerging opportunities and challenges,” Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said of the Japan visit.

While New Delhi has said it is relying on talks to

resolve Mr Trump’s additional tariffs of up to 50 per cent on Indian exports,

Japan’s top trade negotiator cancelled a US visit over a snag in the two nations’ tariff deal.

Mr Modi’s visit to Japan on Aug 29 and 30 gains significance as both belong to the Quad grouping, along with Australia and the United States, which seeks to counter China’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific region.

Despite strained ties with Washington, India said Mr Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba would discuss expanding cooperation within the framework of the regional security grouping.

Japanese companies are set to invest up to 10 trillion yen (S$87.3 billion) in India in the next decade, public broadcaster NHK said, as Suzuki Motor pledged to pump in about US$8 billion (S$10.3 billion) over the next five to six years.

The two nations were partners “made for each other”, Mr Modi said this week, after visiting a Suzuki plant in India.

Their leaders are expected to discuss tie-ups on critical minerals and Japanese investments in high-value manufacturing in India, officials said.

India is believed to hold substantial deposits of rare earths, used in everything from smartphones to solar panels, but lacks the technology to mine and process them extensively.

India, China rapprochement

Mr Modi next travels to China for a two-day summit of regional security bloc Shanghai Cooperation Organisation from Aug 31. His visit comes as the neighbours strive to defuse tension following deadly border clashes in 2020.

He is expected to meet both Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin for two-way talks.

China and India are seeking to resume direct flights after a gap of five years and are discussing easing trade barriers, including reopening border trade at three Himalayan crossings.

India is also considering easing investment rules that put greater scrutiny on Chinese companies, while Beijing recently agreed to lift curbs on exports of fertilisers, rare earth minerals and tunnel boring machines to India.

The meeting comes against the backdrop of Washington’s long-held desire for the world’s largest democracy to act as a counterweight to China, which analysts say could offer New Delhi leverage in the effort to secure lower tariffs.

Otherwise, India could get pushed towards China and possibly join a Beijing-led free trade pact, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, said economics professor Devashish Mitra at New York’s Syracuse University.

“In the situation and climate President Trump has created, it won’t be surprising if both India and China find this a mutually beneficial transaction,” he said.

But there is limited scope to improve relations with China, said Mr William Yang, senior North-east Asia analyst for the International Crisis Group.

“For now, China will be happy to reciprocate India’s desire to mend some areas of the strained ties by holding high-level diplomatic talks, but is unlikely to pursue a broader diplomatic breakthrough while existing differences remain,” he warned. REUTERS

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