Site icon khabri Adda

Why Is America Openly Supporting Pakistan?

Why Is America Openly Supporting Pakistan?

Following the Pahalgam terror attack in India, most assumed global sympathy would lean toward India. Yet shockingly, just four days later, the U.S. appeared to strike at India—not militarily, but economically and diplomatically. This surprising shift raises a crucial question: Why is America openly supporting Pakistan?

America’s Sudden Economic Partnership with Pakistan

Soon after the attack, an American company—World Liberty Financial—signed a confidential deal with Pakistan to turn it into South Asia’s crypto and trade hub. This raised red flags globally.

But what made it worse?
The company is majority-owned (60%) by the Trump family. Present at this shady deal were:

And the broker for the deal? A Binance crypto platform founder who, just days later, publicly slammed India’s economy.

Economic Warfare: U.S. Tariffs and India’s Downturn

Almost immediately, U.S. import tariffs on Indian jewelry and textiles were increased from 3.91% to 26%—a 6x jump. This devastated India’s exports, especially:

Result: Indian exporters lost demand overnight. Thousands of Indian jobs were at risk.

Tech Pressure: Threatening Apple & Targeting Indian Startups

Former U.S. President Donald Trump even threatened Apple CEO Tim Cook, suggesting Apple should stop manufacturing in India. While Cook ignored him and expanded Apple’s operations in India, other U.S. companies became hesitant:

Why Is the U.S. Upset with India?

Despite having once celebrated Trump’s electoral win, India has now become a thorn in the U.S.’s strategic plans. But why?

1. India’s Independent Defense Decisions

2. India Ignored U.S. Demands at G20

3. India’s Bold Energy Deals

India’s Digital Defiance

India levied digital taxes on U.S. tech giants like Google and Amazon—a bold move interpreted as an open challenge to American dominance.

To reduce U.S. economic control, India is:

Building a New Trade Ecosystem: IMEC

India is developing the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) to:

This has made both China and the U.S. insecure about India’s growing independence.

The Semiconductor & Skilled Labor Strategy

India is:

These moves ensure:

India’s Weaknesses (And Solutions in Progress)

Despite progress, India still lags in:

India is addressing this via:

Why the World Is Still Betting on India

Despite U.S. pressure, global companies prefer India because:

As of late 2024, 69% of U.S. companies in China were shifting operations—India was their preferred destination.

Conclusion: A Silent Economic War

India is not at war with the U.S. militarily, but economically, a cold war is underway. Unlike Pakistan, India refuses to become a puppet state.

Through resilience, independence, and strategy, India is transforming from a global manufacturing alternative to a silent superpower.

The question now is not “Why is America supporting Pakistan?” but rather:
“How long can India resist and win this economic war of influence?”

Exit mobile version