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Trump says Modi vowed India won’t buy Russian oil as Ukraine talks intensify



US President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, on September 30, 2025.— Reuters
US President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, on September 30, 2025.— Reuters

US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had assured him India would stop purchasing Russian oil, a move Trump called a “big step” in efforts to economically isolate Moscow.

“So I was not happy that India was buying oil, and he assured me today that they will not be buying oil from Russia,” Trump told reporters during a White House event.

“That’s a big step. Now we’re going to get China to do the same thing.”

The Indian embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to emailed questions about whether Modi had made such a commitment to Trump.

An Indian pledge to halt buying Russian oil would mark a potential turning point in global energy diplomacy, as Washington intensifies efforts to choke Moscow’s oil revenues amid its ongoing war in Ukraine.

It would also signal a major shift by one of Moscow’s top energy customers and could reshape the calculus for other nations still importing Russian crude.

It comes as Trump seeks to leverage bilateral relationships to enforce economic isolation, rather than relying solely on multilateral sanctions.

During his comments to reporters, Trump added that India could not “immediately” halt shipments, calling it “a little bit of a process, but that process will be over soon.”

“I’ve stopped eight wars so far,” said US President Donald Trump, replying to a question, and he added that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told him he had saved millions of lives.

Trump also said that seven planes were shot down during the Pakistan-India war and that the two countries had come very close to a nuclear conflict.

PM Shehbaz on Monday described Trump as a “genuine man of peace”, who had worked relentlessly and untiringly to end global conflicts, including the war in Gaza.

Standing with the US president and other global leaders at a Sharm el-Sheikh press conference, Shehbaz said peace was achieved after months of Trump-led diplomacy, making the world “a place of peace and prosperity.”

He said Pakistan had earlier nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his “outstanding and extraordinary contributions” in halting a potential war between India and Pakistan and securing a ceasefire.

“Today, again, I would like to [re-]nominate this great president [Trump] for the Nobel Peace Prize because I genuinely feel that he’s the most deserving candidate,” PM Shehbaz said, addressing the Gaza peace conference earlier this week.

“He has brought peace not only to South Asia, saving millions of lives, but also to the Middle East through his efforts in Gaza.”

The prime minister hailed Trump as “the man the world needed most at this point in time,” adding that history would remember him as the leader who “stopped seven and today, eight wars.”

“Had it not been for this gentleman [Trump],” Shehbaz said, “a full-scale war between two nuclear powers could have erupted. His timely intervention averted catastrophe.”

The prime minister also said that Trump’s “visionary and exemplary leadership” had made him a symbol of hope and peace for the world, and that his name “will be remembered in golden words.”

The nuclear-armed rivals used missiles, drones and artillery fire during the four-day fighting — their worst in decades — triggered by an April attack on tourists in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad, before agreeing to a ceasefire brokered by the US.

Pakistan has denied involvement in the April attack and offered to participate in an independent and credible probe.

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