The US is pressuring India to reduce its reliance on products made in China

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said New Delhi was a natural partner to Washington as "one of a few trusted, like-minded countries"

Trump visit to India

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump during a 2019 rally in Texas. Source: FR33763 AAP

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has called on India to tamp down its dependence on Chinese goods, amid growing tensions between Washington and Beijing.

In remarks to a US-India virtual business summit, Mr Pompeo said New Delhi was a natural partner to Washington as "one of a few trusted, like-minded countries".

"India has a chance to attract global supply chains away from China and reduce its reliance on Chinese companies in areas like telecommunications, medical supplies, and others," he told the meeting organised by the US-India Business Council.
"India is in this position because it has earned the trust of many nations around the world, including the United States."

US-China relations - already strained over the coronavirus pandemic, the situation in Hong Kong and trade - took a turn for the worse Wednesday when Washington ordered that Beijing shut its consulate in Houston.

Nuclear-armed neighbours China and India, the world's two most populous nations, also have long had a prickly relationship. 

But ties deteriorated significantly following a border clash on 15 June that left 20 Indian soldiers dead as well as an unknown number of Chinese casualties.
Mr Pompeo said the clashes were "initiated by" China's armed forces and were another example of "unacceptable behaviour" from China's ruling Communist Party.

He praised India for banning 59 Chinese mobile apps, including TikTok, saying the video-sharing app "presents serious security risks for the Indian people".

In the keynote speech to the summit, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called on US companies to invest in his nation of 1.3 billion people, saying trade between the two countries would help the virus-hit world economy to bounce back.


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Source: AFP, SBS

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