Pakistan too offers US zero tariff

In a significant diplomatic and economic move, Pakistan has offered the United States a zero-tariff bilateral trade agreement, aimed at boosting trade across multiple sectors, government sources confirmed.
“Pakistan is proposing a bilateral agreement with zero tariffs on selected tariff lines of mutual interest,” said a senior government official familiar with the matter told Geo News. “The goal is to expand trade opportunities between the two countries by removing key barriers.”
Pakistan’s proposal follows Trump’s Thursday’s remarks that India has expressed willingness to remove all tariffs on US goods, further heating up global trade discourse.
Speaking at a business event in Doha, where several deals with Qatar were announced — including Boeing jet purchases — Trump said: “The Indian government has offered us a deal where they are willing to charge us literally no tariffs.”
These claims, particularly regarding India’s intentions, have yet to be officially confirmed, with the BBC reporting that India’s commerce ministry has not responded to requests for comment.
Meanwhile, US-India trade negotiations are ongoing, especially after President Trump’s imposition of up to 27% tariffs on Indian imports in April. That move triggered intensified talks, with a 90-day tariff pause set to expire on July 9.
The broader geopolitical context is also critical: Saturday’s ceasefire between India and Pakistan ended their worst military standoff in nearly three decades, a confrontation that had raised global alarm over the risk of escalation between two nuclear-armed states.
The offer comes in the wake of a ceasefire brokered by US President Donald Trump between Pakistan and India – a development that has calmed one of the world’s most volatile borders.
Following the agreement, President Trump praised the leadership of both nations and said the United States would be engaging in “a lot of trade” with them.
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