Trump and Modi: Weapons, Trade, and the Mutual Love of Selective Democracy
On February 13, the White House rolled out the red carpet for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, where Trump and Modi engaged in a warm, back-slapping display of strategic friendship—the kind of “partnership” that thrives on trade deals, military pacts, and a shared indifference toward human rights.
Because when two strongman-style leaders get together, who has time for pesky things like freedom of the press and minority rights?
Weapons, Visas, and ‘Strategic Partnerships’—Human Rights Need Not Apply
Let’s break down the key takeaways from the Trump-Modi diplomatic exchange:
✔ Arms Deals: The U.S. is selling India more weapons, because nothing strengthens democracy like a fresh shipment of fighter jets and missile defense systems.
✔ Trade & Immigration: Modi pushed for more visas for skilled Indian workers, and Trump—who spent years railing against immigration—suddenly loves Indian tech talent. Funny how things change when the migrants in question are coding AI instead of crossing the Rio Grande.
✔ Ignoring Human Rights: There was no mention of Modi’s increasingly authoritarian tendencies, from press crackdowns to jailing dissidents and eroding religious freedoms.
Trump, naturally, was all business. Because why scold a leader for silencing journalists when he’d love to do the same?
A Bipartisan Blind Spot: The India Exception
The real kicker? It’s not just Trump who’s turning a blind eye to India’s growing democratic backslide.
✔ The U.S. has been looking the other way for years, because India is too important as a counterweight to China.
✔ Under Biden, Modi’s government got the same polite treatment, even as it erased Kashmir’s autonomy, locked up opposition leaders, and silenced critics.
But now, under Trump’s ‘America First’ policy, the U.S. has officially gone full realist—which means values don’t matter, only leverage does.
And India? India knows exactly how to play this game.
✔ Modi promises to crack down on illegal Indian immigrants in the U.S.
✔ Trump nods approvingly while quietly expanding H-1B visas for tech workers.
✔ Both leaders walk away happy—one with weapons, the other with economic leverage.
The Silence on Modi’s Playbook
Of course, human rights did not come up in any meaningful way. No mention of:
❌ India’s crackdown on Muslims (including mass arrests and citizenship laws targeting minorities).
❌ Sedition charges against journalists and activists.
❌ The revocation of Kashmir’s autonomy—because why mention a region that’s essentially been under lockdown since 2019?
Instead, Trump and Modi smiled for the cameras, shook hands, and reminded the world that when it comes to realpolitik, democracy is just a word on a speechwriter’s draft.
The Bottom Line: The U.S.-India Partnership is Strong—Just Don’t Ask About Values
The Trump-Modi summit reinforced what we already knew:
1️⃣ India is too important to the U.S. for Washington to criticize Modi’s democratic erosion.
2️⃣ Trump’s version of foreign policy is unapologetically transactional—if it benefits U.S. interests, the rest is just noise.
3️⃣ If you’re waiting for the U.S. to take a principled stand on India’s human rights record, don’t hold your breath.
As long as China looms as the geopolitical boogeyman, expect Washington to keep arming India, praising its economy, and pretending not to notice its drift toward authoritarianism.
Because in the world of Trump-era diplomacy, there’s always a deal to be made, even if it costs a few democratic principles along the way.