
Bangladesh and the United States officially signed a Reciprocal Trade Agreement on 9 February, 2026, a move described by the signatories as a watershed moment for the nation’s economic history.
Finalised in the concluding days of the Muhammad Yunus-led interim administration on the eve of national elections, the pact has been publicly framed as a tool for “market access” and “deepened commercial ties.”
However, a rigorous analysis of the trade deal document – leaked from the USA – suggests these terms may serve as a facade for a structurally unequal instrument designed to formalize leverage in favor of Washington.
The document functions as a vehicle through which the United States has secured profound influence over Bangladesh’s regulatory discretion, digital governance, and future strategic flexibility.
By trading away long-term policy latitude for limited, conditional relief, negotiators have effectively narrowed Bangladesh’s economic sovereignty in ways that may reshape the country’s room for maneuver for decades.
Asymmetry of adjustment and concession
Foundational imbalance of the agreement lies in the disproportionate “burden of adjustment” placed upon Dhaka. Under the banner of reciprocity, Bangladesh is required to “liberalise, recognise, align, restrain, and adapt” across an exceptionally broad range of domains.
These concessions include granting preferential treatment in regulatory recognition, accepting tighter discipline on national licensing powers, and providing deeper access to the domestic agricultural sector.
In stark contrast, the concessions offered by the United States are notably narrower in scope.
Crucially, Washington retains broad “interpretive latitude” regarding its own obligations while preserving the unilateral ability to restore tariff pressure if it deems Bangladesh to be in non-compliance.
This structure indicates that the agreement is less about mutual benefit and more about using market access as a tool to institutionalise American leverage over the Bangladeshi state.
The full value of the policy latitude being surrendered often only becomes apparent after it has been lost, making the “isolated commercial benefits” of the deal a poor trade-off for the erosion of sovereign control.
The enforcement trap: Article 6.4
The predatory nature of the pact is perhaps most visible in its enforcement provisions. Article 6.4 establishes a mechanism where, if the United States considers Bangladesh to be non-compliant, it may seek consultations.
Should these fail to produce a “satisfactory outcome” – a term that remains subject to American definition – Washington is empowered to reimpose reciprocal tariffs on any or all Bangladeshi imports.
While the language of the provision is technically bilateral, the practical reality is defined by the vast disparity in power.
The United States enters this agreement with significantly greater coercive capacity and market power, allowing it to define “non-compliance” on terms that a smaller economy like Bangladesh would find almost impossible to resist.
The text explicitly protects the right of either party to impose additional tariffs for “economic and national security concerns” consistent with domestic law.
In practice, this ensures that while Bangladesh is busy harmonising its internal systems to meet US standards, Washington retains the legal fallback to restore economic pressure whenever it judges those concessions to be “insufficiently observed.”
Strategic enclosure, geopolitical conditioning
Beyond the realm of immediate trade, the agreement repeatedly crosses into strategic terrain, effectively conditioning Bangladesh’s future diplomatic choices. Article 4.1 is a primary example of this “strategic enclosure.”
It mandates that if the United States adopts trade actions to protect its own economic or national security, Bangladesh must adopt “complementary restrictive measures” in support of that American action.
This clause does not merely govern bilateral relations; it draws Dhaka into an obligation to support the American strategic trade posture against third countries, regardless of whether such actions serve Bangladesh’s own security interests.
This logic of alignment is extended in Article 4.2, which requires Bangladesh to harmonise its export control framework with US standards.
Bangladesh is tasked with ensuring that local companies do not “backfill or undermine” American controls and, more strikingly, must cooperate to restrict transactions that would violate US sanctions even if those transactions occurred entirely outside of US jurisdiction.
For a nation heavily dependent on energy and fuel imports from the Gulf region, this “internalisation” of Washington’s strategic judgment represents a dangerous narrowing of geopolitical room.
It suggests that future commercial and diplomatic decisions will increasingly be filtered through the “anticipated tolerances” of the United States rather than through Bangladesh’s independent national interest.
Energy veto and diplomatic shadows
The most overt instance of strategic overreach is found in Article 4.3(5), which targets the sovereign procurement of long-term energy infrastructure. The clause stipulates that Bangladesh shall not purchase nuclear reactors, fuel rods, or enriched uranium from any country that “jeopardises essential US interests.”
By inserting this standard into a commercial agreement, the US has effectively secured a veto over Bangladesh’s nuclear energy sector. The operative test for a supplier is no longer its utility to Bangladesh or its compliance with international law, but its perceived impact on American strategic preferences.
The agreement further seeks to isolate Bangladesh from other global economic influences.
Articles 3.2 and 4.3 allow the US to terminate the pact and reimpose tariffs if Bangladesh enters into digital trade or preferential economic agreements with “non-market countries” that Washington deems a threat.
For a country situated at a critical geopolitical intersection, such “optionality” is the primary tool for maintaining equilibrium between competing external powers.
By codifying these restrictions in a trade instrument, the agreement appears designed to reduce that optionality in advance, shadowing Bangladesh’s future diplomacy with third countries.
Deficit of transparency, accountability
The circumstances surrounding the signing of the deal have invited significant suspicion. Signed just days before a national election, the agreement was pushed through at a moment of “maximum political thinness.”
While Foreign Minister Khalilur Rahman – who was the national security adviser during negotiations – claimed the process was not “in the dark” and had the consent of major political parties like the BNP and Jamaat, this does little to provide democratic legitimacy.
If consent was indeed secured among elite actors behind closed doors while the public was denied transparency, it suggests a process where secrecy was treated as a substitute for legitimacy.
The agreement is not merely a “routine commercial compact” but a profound strategic realignment that was shielded from meaningful public scrutiny.
Ultimately, the true cost of the 2026 trade deal lies in what Bangladesh may cease to control in the long term.
As the nation begins to feel the weight of these restrictive clauses, the demand for accountability must extend to those who negotiated and enabled a pact that traded away sovereign leverage for conditional, short-term relief.
The agreement stands as a stark reminder of how “reciprocal trade” can be used as a mask for the systematic erosion of a smaller state’s economic and strategic independence.