'I don't know anything about it,' says Trump on US imports of Russian fertilisers and chemicals

President Donald Trump has said that he doesn't know anything about the US imports of Russian uranium, fertilisers and chemicals.
'I don't know anything about it,' says Trump on US imports of Russian fertilisers and chemicals
US President Donald Trump
Published on

New York/Washington | President Donald Trump has said that he doesn't know anything about the US imports of Russian uranium, fertilisers and chemicals.

Trump made the comments on Tuesday while responding to a question on India's statement on American imports of these commodities.

“I don't know anything about it. I'd have to check, but we'll get back to you on that,” Trump said, adding that he will soon decide on tariffs to be imposed on nations buying Russian energy.

Trump has threatened to “substantially” raise US tariffs on India, accusing it of buying massive amounts of Russian oil and selling it for big profits.

India on Monday mounted an unusually sharp counterattack on the US and the European Union for their “unjustified and unreasonable” targeting of New Delhi for its procurement of Russian crude oil.

Firmly rejecting the criticism, India pointed out the double standards in targeting it on the issue and said both the US and the EU are continuing their trade relations with Russia.

“Unlike our case, such trade is not even a vital national compulsion," the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said in a statement on Monday night.

The Europe-Russia trade includes not just energy, but also fertilisers, mining products, chemicals, iron and steel, and machinery and transport equipment, the MEA said.

"Where the US is concerned, it continues to import from Russia uranium hexafluoride for its nuclear industry, palladium for its EV industry, fertilisers as well as chemicals," it added.

"In this background, the targeting of India is unjustified and unreasonable," the MEA said.

In response to another question that he has threatened to impose 100 per cent tariffs on all countries that purchase Russian energy, including China, Trump said while he never said a percentage, “but we'll be doing quite a bit of that. We'll see what happens over the next fairly short period of time”.

He said that the US has a “meeting with Russia” on Wednesday, without giving further details on where and what the meeting will entail. “We're going to see what happens. We'll make that determination at that time.” Earlier on Tuesday, Trump said in an interview with CNBC that India has not been a good trading partner and announced he is “going to raise” tariffs on India “very substantially over the next 24 hours” because New Delhi is buying Russian oil and "fuelling the Ukraine war machine".

At the event Tuesday afternoon, where Trump signed an executive order establishing a White House Olympics Task Force to handle security and other issues related to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, he repeated again that he stopped the war between India and Pakistan, a claim he has made over 30 times since May 10.

India has been consistently maintaining that the understanding on cessation of hostilities with Pakistan was reached following direct talks between the Directors General of Military Operations (DGMOs) of the two militaries.

“I stopped five wars in the last five months,” Trump said, adding that he would like the Ukraine conflict to be the sixth one he helps bring to an end.

“You just take a look at the ones just over the last two or three months, it's been amazing. This is the one I'm trying to stop. This is the one we're working hardest on,” Trump said, referring to the Ukraine conflict with Russia.

“The other ones I stopped within a matter of days, almost every one of them, including India and Pakistan. And I could go over the whole list, but you know the list as well as I do,” he said.

Meanwhile, State Department Spokesperson Tammy Bruce said it will be up to President Trump on how to respond to “those nations that are facilitating this war on Ukraine”.

She was asked about India's comment that New Delhi is not going to change its position on oil purchase from Russia.

“I will not characterise or remark on another nation's comments about what they will or will not do…But I do know that, of course, President Trump understands the entire field, and he has made it very clear he doesn't like what's been happening,” she said.

To another question on India and China indicating they fully intend to continue purchasing Russian oil irrespective of US sanctions, Bruce said Washington is now talking about secondary sanctions, sanctioning a country, company or others that might be doing business with a country that the US has sanctioned in this instance.

Latest News

No stories found.

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
Metrovaartha- En
english.metrovaartha.com