The Congress on Friday, 1 August, asserted that India has the highest stakes in institutions such as the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and WHO which are being "destroyed" and "gutted" by US President Donald Trump, and cannot remain a mute spectator while being content with coining slogans and acronyms.
Congress general secretary in-charge communications Jairam Ramesh said the WTO had been dealt very heavy blows during Trump-I.
"It has been destroyed during Trump-II. The rules-based, multilateral trading system put in place with the US itself playing a leadership role has been finished off," Ramesh claimed.
The US's approach now is to negotiate -- if at all -- bilaterally but finally decide unilaterally, the Congress leader said in a post on X.
President Trump has also gutted the WHO and withdrawn from the Paris Climate Agreement and UNESCO, Ramesh said.
Will Modi remain silent on Trump’s remarks on India, asks KhargeThe WTO had been dealt very heavy blows during Trump-I. It has been destroyed during Trump-II. The rules-based, multilateral trading system put in place with the US itself playing a leadership role has been finished off. The US's approach now is to negotiate--if at…
— Jairam Ramesh (@Jairam_Ramesh) August 1, 2025
"India has the highest stakes in such international accords and institutions. It cannot remain a mute spectator and be content with coining slogans and acronyms," Ramesh said.
His remarks came after President Trump issued an executive order listing the various duties that Washington will impose on exports from countries around the world.
India will face tariffs of 25 per cent on its exports to the US.
The executive order, however, does not mention the penalty that Trump had said India will have to pay because of its purchases of Russian military equipment and energy.
On Wednesday, Trump, through a post on his social media website Truth Social, announced the 25 per cent tariff on India and an additional penalty for New Delhi's purchases from Russia.
While 1 August was the tariff deadline, the new levies will come into effect from 7 August.
In April, Trump had announced that India will face a 26 per cent discounted reciprocal tariff, a per cent higher than the rate announced now.
In its reaction to the US' tariff announcement, India has said it will take all necessary steps to safeguard and promote national interest and that the implications of the tariffs are being examined.
Slamming commerce minister Piyush Goyal's remarks in Parliament on US' tariff announcement as a "non-statement", the Congress on Thursday said all he engaged in was "totally misplaced self-congratulation" and claimed that the concerns and sentiments of Indian businesses were simply not addressed.
Goyal on Thursday said India will take all necessary steps to safeguard and promote national interest. His remarks came a day after Trump announced 25 per cent tariffs plus penalty on domestic exports to America from 1 August.
You may also like
'People were sold a lie': Oceangate whistleblower warned of Titan risks before 2023 implosion; was aware 'there would be an incident'
'Whole thing is a hoax': Donald Trump, JD Vance dismiss report on Epstein dinner meeting; calls it 'fake news'
Is Ather Reving Enough, Clear Axes 100 Jobs & More
Delicious carrot cake recipe only needs four main ingredients including kitchen staple
Halifax explains who is eligible for extra payments into savings accounts