Editorial: The White House wanted India to bow. Instead, Narendra Modi flew to China, shook Xi Jinping’s hand and left Washington sidelined

The US-India bromance is well and truly over thanks to the president’s double dose of tariffs

India's prime minister hopes to draw nearer to some of the world’s largest economies.

The meeting took place just days after Trump's administration slapped high tariffs on India.

Trump slammed India’s trade relationship with the United States as a “totally one sided disaster” after Prime Minister Narendra Modi posed with Russia and China’s leaders at a…

US president recently imposed 50 percent tariff on Indian goods and denounced New Delhi for buying Russian oil.

Editorial: The White House wanted India to bow. Instead, Narendra Modi flew to China, shook Xi Jinping’s hand and left Washington sidelined

This comes against the backdrop of the U.S. imposing 50% tariffs on the country, including secondary duties of 25% last month for purchasing Russian oil.

His comment came hours after Indian PM Modi met China's Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin.

Prolonged 50% tariffs could shave off as much as 0.8% of India's GDP - so what are Delhi's options?