America Spent Months Bullying India Over Russian Oil — Then Started a War, Broke the World's Energy Supply, and Came Begging India to Please Buy Russian Oil Again

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America Spent Months Bullying India Over Russian Oil — Then Started a War, Broke the World's Energy Supply, and Came Begging India to Please Buy Russian Oil Again

US slapped 50% tariffs on India for buying Russian oil. Then started Iran war, closed Hormuz & issued a waiver begging India to buy Russian oil. You can't make this up.

Washington's Most Spectacular Foreign Policy U-Turn — Served With a Straight Face

There are policy reversals. There are embarrassing climbdowns. There are moments when a government's stated strategy collapses so completely under the weight of its own contradictions that satirists genuinely struggle to improve upon the raw material reality has provided.

And then there is what the Trump administration did on March 5, 2026.

For much of last year, Washington sought to starve Moscow's war machine of cash, in part by removing one of its most loyal customers: India. Under President Donald Trump's pressure campaign, the White House slapped high tariffs on many of New Delhi's exports and sanctioned two of the Kremlin's largest oil firms. Business Standard

The strategy appeared to be working. While India didn't quit its Russian oil habit entirely, it sharply reduced its purchases in favour of supplies from the Middle East. Business Standard Washington congratulated itself on a geopolitical masterstroke. Months of pressure, tariff threats and sanctions had apparently nudged the world's most strategically autonomous democracy into compliance. The memo went out: India was off Russian oil.

Then the United States launched a military offensive against Iran.

Last week's joint US-Israeli offensive against Iran effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, through which almost all Middle Eastern oil flows. Business Standard

And on March 5, 2026 — with oil prices surging 30% in a single week, global energy markets in freefall, and the consequences of Washington's own military adventure reverberating through every kitchen and fuel pump on the planet — the US Treasury Department quietly issued a 30-day waiver allowing Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil currently stranded at sea. Twitter

The same Russian oil Washington had spent months, enormous diplomatic capital and punishing tariffs trying to stop India from buying — Washington was now officially, formally, and with a straight face, asking India to please buy.


The Audacity of the Timeline

Let us lay this out in its full, magnificent absurdity, because the sequence deserves to be read slowly and with complete attention.

The White House slapped 50% tariffs on Indian goods — half of them to directly punish New Delhi for its Russian oil purchases — and later sanctioned two of Russia's largest oil firms, in a bid to choke off the Kremlin's key source of foreign cash. Business Standard

On February 2, 2026, Trump announced he had reached a trade deal with India after Prime Minister Modi committed not to buy Russian oil in exchange for access to US and Venezuelan supply. India TV News A triumph of American coercive diplomacy, announced with fanfare.

After slapping 25% "penalty" tariffs on India for buying Russian crude — revoked last month — the US on Thursday issued a 30-day waiver to New Delhi for purchasing crude from Moscow as the Iran war upends global supplies. Business Standard

In the space of roughly four weeks, the United States government: demanded India stop buying Russian oil, extracted a commitment from India to stop buying Russian oil, celebrated that commitment as a diplomatic victory, launched a military offensive that destroyed the alternative supply chain it had promised India, and then issued an emergency waiver begging India to buy Russian oil again.

This is not foreign policy. This is a man who insists you change your dinner reservation, books you a table at a different restaurant, burns that restaurant down, and then asks why you haven't eaten yet.


India's Response: Dignity Served Ice Cold

To its enormous credit, New Delhi declined to be publicly gracious about Washington's spectacular self-inflicted humiliation.

"India has never depended on permission from any country to buy Russian oil," the Indian government said in a statement. "India is still importing Russian oil even in February 2026, and Russia is still India's largest crude oil supplier." National Herald India

Read that statement again. India did not thank Washington for the waiver. It did not express relief. It did not even acknowledge that the waiver represented any meaningful change in India's sovereign energy decisions. It simply stated, with the regal indifference of a nation that has been making these calculations long before Trump discovered them and will continue making them long after he moves on to the next target — that it buys Russian oil, it always has, and it does not require anyone's permission to do so.

India's Press Information Bureau insisted that New Delhi was not dependent on "a short-term waiver" to buy Russian oil. National Herald India

The waiver, in other words, was not a gift India was grateful for. It was an acknowledgement by Washington that its own pressure campaign had been rendered moot by its own military adventure — and India was graciously declining to rub it in any further than necessary.


The Numbers That Expose the Full Scale of Washington's Miscalculation

West Texas Intermediate oil surged 8.51% — the biggest single-day gain since May 2020 — to close at $81.01 per barrel. Global benchmark Brent rose 4.93% to settle at $85.41 per barrel. Business Standard

Data from analytics firm Kpler shows that the narrow Hormuz waterway funnels 2.5 to 2.7 million barrels of India's daily crude imports, largely sourced from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. Business Standard Every single one of those barrels was now either stranded, at risk, or dramatically more expensive — because the supply route Washington had pointed India toward as the alternative to Russian crude had been closed by Washington's own bombs.

Indian refiners have bought about 30 million barrels of Russian oil since the US provided the green light — India had been winding down its purchases of Russian oil in response to US pressure, filling the gap with replacement barrels from Saudi Arabia and Iraq — only to find supplies cut off by a widening conflict in the Middle East. Zee News

A research analyst at Kpler predicted India will go "back again to pre-sanctions level, buying around 40 to 45% of crude from Russia." Business Standard

To summarise: months of American pressure, punishing tariffs, diplomatic strong-arming and extracted trade commitments resulted in India temporarily reducing its Russian oil purchases — only for a war of American making to restore those purchases to exactly where they were before Washington intervened. Net geopolitical result: zero. Net cost to India: significant economic disruption. Net cost to American credibility: incalculable.


Even Washington's Own Party Is Appalled

The waiver was so strategically incoherent that it generated immediate, furious condemnation — not from India, not from Russia, not from the usual chorus of international critics, but from within the United States Congress itself.

"Your recent decision to provide a 30-day waiver is dangerous, self-defeating, and indefensible," Rep. Sam Liccardo and Sen. Ruben Gallego wrote in a letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. "This waiver constitutes an inexplicable act of material benefit to the enemy." Business Standard

The reason for that extraordinary charge? After the sanctions waiver was issued, it was reported that Russia is assisting Iran in targeting US ships, aircraft and bases in the region. "By providing this waiver, you have signalled that the United States will reward attacks on our troops, not deter them," the lawmakers wrote. Business Standard

The architects of the pressure campaign against India's Russian oil purchases had, through a single military miscalculation, created a situation in which the United States was simultaneously fighting Iran, watching Russia help Iran target American troops, and issuing Washington-sanctioned waivers for the purchase of Russian oil — thereby funnelling revenue to the very power assisting in the targeting of American soldiers.

"Rather than performing the necessary contingency planning that would keep India and other allies supplied with alternative sources, the administration's hapless approach has allowed Russia and other adversaries to profit from oil reserves previously constrained by sanctions," the lawmakers wrote. Business Standard

The word "hapless" — deployed by an American Congressman about his own administration's energy policy — is perhaps the most precisely devastating diplomatic vocabulary to emerge from this entire crisis.


The Bessent Defence: "Pragmatic Step" for "Good Actors"

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attempted to reframe the waiver not as a humiliating reversal but as a calculated act of strategic generosity — with results of mixed persuasiveness.

"The world is well supplied in oil thanks to @POTUS' policy of American Energy Dominance. Our allies in India have been good actors and have previously stopped buying sanctioned Russian oil. As we work to ease the temporary gap of oil supply around the world, we have temporarily…" Bessent posted on X. Wikipedia

"Good actors." After months of being characterised as rogue purchasers financing Moscow's war machine, India had been promoted — overnight, without explanation or irony — to "good actors." The promotion coincided precisely with Washington needing something from New Delhi, which is the kind of scheduling coincidence that Indian foreign policy analysts tend to notice and file away for future reference.

"To enable oil to keep flowing into the global market, the Treasury Department is issuing a temporary 30-day waiver to allow Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil. This deliberately short-term measure will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government as it only authorises transactions involving oil already stranded at sea," Bessent said. Twitter

Secretary Bessent added that India, described as "an essential US partner," is expected to increase purchases of American crude once the immediate crisis passes. DNA India

Washington, in other words, is already laying the groundwork for the next pressure campaign — the one that will, once the Iran war stabilises and the Hormuz Strait reopens, demand that India reduce its Russian oil purchases once again in favour of American crude. The cycle, apparently, is designed to repeat indefinitely.


What This Means for India's Strategic Autonomy

For India, the events of the past four weeks are not merely a geopolitical spectacle to observe from a safe analytical distance. They carry a direct, practical, and deeply instructive lesson about the architecture of Washington's relationship with New Delhi.

This is not a broad relaxation of secondary US sanctions. Instead, it addresses an acute one-off supply emergency triggered by the conflict in the Middle East — and it comes with limitations, conditions and a deadline. DNA India The waiver expires April 4, 2026. After that, the pressure to stop buying Russian oil will presumably resume — until the next time Washington needs India's cooperation to manage a crisis of its own making.

India has, throughout this entire episode, demonstrated the strategic patience and sovereign self-confidence of a nation that has been navigating great-power competition for seventy-five years. It reduced Russian oil purchases when American pressure made the trade-offs acceptable. It never promised to stop entirely. It never surrendered the option. And when the calculus changed — when Washington's own military adventure destroyed the alternative supply chains it had offered India as compensation — India simply resumed the purchasing patterns that have always served its national interest.

Russia increased its oil sales to India by 2,200% in 2022 after sanctions ended exports to the European market. National Herald India That relationship — built on mutual economic interest, sustained through years of Western pressure, and now validated by the catastrophic failure of that pressure's central premise — is not a temporary arrangement. It is a structural feature of India's energy architecture that no 30-day waiver, no 25% tariff and no extracted trade commitment has meaningfully altered.


 The Lesson Washington Cannot Seem to Learn

The US-India-Russia oil saga of early 2026 will be taught in geopolitics and international relations courses for decades — not as an example of successful coercive diplomacy, but as a masterclass in how not to construct one.

You cannot bully a strategic partner for months over an energy relationship that serves their national interest. You cannot extract commitments by threatening tariffs, then destroy the alternative supply chain those commitments depended upon through unilateral military action, then come back asking the same partner to please resume the energy relationship you spent months punishing them for. You cannot spend diplomatic capital you do not have, on a pressure campaign that your own military strategy rendered moot, and then describe the resulting waiver as evidence of your ally's good behaviour.

India did not need Washington's permission to buy Russian oil before March 5, 2026. India has never depended on permission from any country to buy Russian oil. National Herald India It does not need it now.

What Washington gave India with this waiver is not a favour. It is a confession — an inadvertent, irrevocable, publicly documented admission that its own Iran war strategy was launched without adequate energy contingency planning, and that its months-long pressure campaign against Indian energy sovereignty was built on assumptions that its own actions destroyed.

America spent months bullying India into compliance. Then it started a war, closed the world's most critical energy corridor, and asked India to please ignore everything that just happened.

India, with characteristic dignity, did not say "I told you so." It merely continued buying Russian oil — as it always has — and left Washington to explain the rest.

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