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MAGA escalates U.S.–India tensions into cultural clash

MAGA escalates U.S.–India tensions into cultural clash
MAGA is seizing on President Trump's trade war with India to mount a broader crusade against Indian immigration, influence and culture.Why it matters: The sudden hostility from Trump's base has stunned Indian officials at a time when New Delhi already was reeling from the president's 50% tariffs, which he imposed as a penalty for buying Russian oil.The big picture: The escalation threatens to unravel Washington's years-long bet that India can serve as a regional counterweight to China — a strategy that Trump himself championed in his first term.Trump and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi linked arms at a massive "Howdy Modi!" rally in Texas in 2019, and again in Modi's home state of Gujarat at an even bigger "Namaste Trump!" event in 2020.But this week, with India-U.S. tensions soaring, Modi joined hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping in his first visit to China in seven years.Behind the scenes: The relationship has soured in Trump's second term not only over trade tensions, but also because Modi declined to back Trump's push for a Nobel Peace Prize, according to the New York Times.What they're saying: For MAGA, which views domestic culture wars as inseparable from foreign policy, the rupture is an opening to reframe U.S.-India relations as a civilizational clash."America does not need more visas for people from India. Perhaps no form of legal immigration has so displaced American workers as those from India. Enough already," top Trump ally Charlie Kirk posted on X."Tariff the call centers. All of them," MAGA podcaster Jack Posobiec demanded after Trump blasted the U.S.–India trade relationship as "totally one-sided," with India buying few U.S. goods.A fatal accident in Florida caused by an unauthorized immigrant truck driver from India has become another rallying cry, with MAGA influencers claiming "third-world" immigration is making U.S. roads unsafe.The intrigue: Trade adviser Peter Navarro has led the anti-India campaign from inside the White House, penning op-eds and even wading into India's sensitive caste politics."I want Indians to understand what is going on: Brahmins are profiteering by buying Russian oil at the expense of the Indian people," Navarro said in an explosive appearance on Fox News.Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent angered Indian nationalists when he joked on Fox last week: "There are a lot of things I worry about. The rupee becoming a reserve currency isn't one of them."Flashback: One of MAGA's earliest schisms of the second Trump term centered on H-1B visas for highly skilled immigrants — a program dominated by Indian workers."America First" nationalists clashed with Trump's new Silicon Valley allies, including Elon Musk, and the pre-inauguration debate quickly devolved into outright racism.MAGA provocateur Laura Loomer said she was briefly suspended from X after she targeted Sriram Krishnan, Trump's Indian-born pick for AI adviser, and claimed that highly skilled immigrants don't have "running water or toilet paper."Between the lines: India began this year as one of the most pro-Trump countries in the world.A January poll by the European Council on Foreign Relations found more than 80% of Indians said his return to office would be good for America, for global peace — and for India.In the U.S., Indian Americans have become an increasingly important part of Trump's coalition, supplying a growing vote share and a significant number of top administration officials.Those include FBI Director Kash Patel, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon and NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya. Vice President J.D. Vance's wife, Usha Vance, is the first Indian-American second lady.The bottom line: That reservoir of goodwill — at home and abroad — is now at risk, as MAGA's culture war seeks to turn India into a pariah.

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