US-India Chill: A 'Fragile Phase' Opens the Door for China in the Indo-Pacific
In late 2025, US-India relations have entered a 'fragile phase' amid growing distrust. Nikkei Asia reports that PM Modi is avoiding President Trump, a development that could allow China to expand its influence in the Indo-Pacific.
A growing chill between Washington and New Delhi is threatening to reshape the strategic landscape of the Indo-Pacific, creating a potential vacuum that Beijing appears poised to fill. According to a December 21, 2025, report from Nikkei Asia, the once-warm relationship has entered a 'fragile phase' as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi seems to be deliberately avoiding U.S. President Donald Trump.
The shift from 'warmth to wariness' is reportedly driven by a fundamental 'growing distrust' between the two leaders. The report notes that Modi has largely steered clear of Trump throughout the latter half of 2025, a clear signal of strain in a partnership considered crucial for balancing power in the region.
This weakening of US-India ties could have significant consequences. Analysts suggest that as Washington and New Delhi drift apart, it creates a strategic opening for China to gain ground and expand its influence across the Indo-Pacific, a region central to global trade and security.
India's diplomatic maneuvering is not without historical precedent. During the Cold War, New Delhi championed a policy of nonalignment but often maintained a distinct tilt toward the Soviet Union. This lean was solidified after the 1962 Sino-Indian border war, which prompted Moscow to increase military aid to India, cementing a pragmatic partnership that lasted for decades.
PRISM Insight
The cooling of US-India ties highlights a persistent challenge for Washington's Indo-Pacific strategy: aligning with partners who fiercely guard their strategic autonomy. For nations like India, partnerships are often pragmatic and transactional, not ideological. This dynamic means that any perceived overreach or unreliability from Washington could quickly push New Delhi to rebalance its relationships, a trend regional powers and global businesses must monitor closely.
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