USCIRF 2025 India Chapter
A statutory body recommending the most severe U.S. government religious freedom designation for India produced a 1,701-word chapter containing 12 government-source citations but no operationalized definitions, no engagement with criticism, no limitations section, and no public process to access the underlying evidence base. The chapter's citation infrastructure improved from nonexistent (2016) to minimal (2025). The analytical framework supporting the CPC recommendation remains opaque.
What This Report Is
USCIRF — the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom — published its 2025 India chapter as part of its annual report to Congress. The chapter reviews religious freedom conditions in India. It recommends that the U.S. government place India on its most serious watch list (called ‘Country of Particular Concern,’ or CPC).
What We Looked At
How a study is done determines whether you can trust what it found. CID evaluates methodology (how the research was done), not conclusions (what the research found). USCIRF’s India chapter may be entirely correct about conditions in India. That is not what we scored. We scored whether the chapter shows its work — its definitions, its sources, its evidence, its engagement with criticism.
We classified this chapter as a Policy Report. That means it pulls together existing information to advise policymakers. It does not collect original data. Because of that classification, two of CID’s eight dimensions (scoring categories) do not apply. The remaining six dimensions carry the full weight of the score.
What We Found
The chapter never responds to criticism. This dimension — Counter-Evidence (which measures whether a report engages with people who disagree with its findings) — scored 1 out of 10. The chapter contains no limitations section. It does not acknowledge competing assessments of India’s religious freedom record. It has no corrections policy. Across every USCIRF India chapter we have scored — from 1999 through 2025 — the Commission has never published a finding that contradicts its prior India assessment. It has never acknowledged a methodological limitation in a country chapter. Critics are not dismissed. They simply do not appear.
Key terms are never defined. Definitional Precision (which measures whether a report defines its terms clearly enough that someone else could apply them consistently) scored 3 out of 10. The chapter’s core question — what counts as a ‘religious freedom violation’ versus a ‘concern’ — is never answered. The law that created USCIRF uses three words to set the standard: ‘systematic, ongoing, egregious.’ The chapter never explains what those words mean in practice. What makes a violation ‘systematic’ rather than ‘sporadic’? How many incidents? How widespread? The reader cannot reconstruct the logic behind the CPC recommendation.
Citations improved — but most claims still lack context. Verification Standards (which measures whether an independent observer can check the report’s claims) scored 5 out of 10. This is actually an improvement. The 2016 India chapter contained zero citations. Zero. The 2025 chapter contains 12 links to government sources. That matters. But 5 out of 6 numerical claims in the chapter lack basic context. When the chapter cites a number, it rarely tells you the denominator — the total it is measured against. A number without a denominator tells you very little. Data access remains closed: there is no public process to request USCIRF’s underlying evidence.
Institutional transparency is strong. Transparency and Governance (which measures whether the organization’s structure, funding, and leadership are visible to the public) scored 7 out of 10 — the highest score in the chapter. Congress funds USCIRF directly. Its nine Commissioners are publicly appointed by the President and congressional leaders from both parties. The Commission answers to congressional oversight. These are real safeguards. The gap is at the analytical level: the chapter does not say who conducted the India assessment or whether any Commissioner had a conflict of interest.
The Bottom Line
The USCIRF 2025 India chapter scored 4.37 out of 10. That places it in the Deficient grade band (4.0 to 5.9), which means the chapter has gaps serious enough to compromise its reliability as a methodological product. No non-compensatory cap (an automatic score limit triggered by failure on a critical dimension) was applied. The grade held steady under three different ways of weighting the dimensions — the classification is not sensitive to how we counted.
Compared to the 2016 India chapter (which scored 4.10 out of 10), the improvement is small and narrow. Citations now exist where they did not before. Everything else — missing definitions, absent counter-evidence, closed data access — is unchanged. The score reflects methodology only. USCIRF’s conclusions about India may be correct even though its published methods have gaps.
Citation Context
How this report's findings have been cited or applied after publication. Severity reflects the gap between what the report establishes and how it was represented.
What was claimed: USCIRF has designated India as a CPC — 'The CPC label is a designation reserved for the world's worst violators of religious freedom.' (Genocide Watch repost of IAMC statement, April 2025). A separate IAMC document filed with USCIRF itself states 'the events of December 2025 underscore the urgency of this designation,' using the word 'designation' to refer to USCIRF's unacted-upon recommendation.
What the report actually says: USCIRF's 2025 Annual Report is an advisory body's non-binding recommendation to the State Department to designate India as a CPC. The State Department has not acted on any USCIRF India CPC recommendation since 2020. The 2025 chapter header reads 'USCIRF–RECOMMENDED FOR COUNTRIES OF PARTICULAR CONCERN (CPC).'
IAMC's March 25, 2025 press release accurately uses 'recommend' in the main body, but a secondary IAMC statement filed on USCIRF's own website (IAMC Statement.pdf, dated January 2026 referencing 2025 report) slips into designation language: 'the urgency of this designation.' The Genocide Watch repost amplified IAMC's framing with the sentence 'The CPC label is a designation reserved for the world's worst violators of religious freedom,' placed immediately after stating USCIRF made this recommendation for India for the sixth consecutive year — creating a structural conflation between recommendation status and official designation. IAMC's 2026 statement on the 2026 report further escalates, calling it a 'designation reserved for the world's worst violators' while framing USCIRF's recommendation as effectively operative policy.
What was claimed: Accurately described CPC as a 'recommendation' but also stated on Instagram (March 17, 2026, referring to 2025 report context): 'USCIRF has recommended that India be recognized as a "country of particular concern" — a designation reserved for...' conflating recommendation with the class of designation.
What the report actually says: USCIRF's 2025 chapter recommends CPC designation for India. The State Department has authority to act or decline. No State Department designation for India was issued.
HfHR's March 26, 2025 press release on the 2025 report correctly frames USCIRF's stance as a 'recommendation' throughout. However, it calls on 'the State Department to comply with the International Religious Freedom Act and accept USCIRF's recommendation,' framing non-adoption as non-compliance — a claim that overstates USCIRF's statutory authority relative to the State Department. HfHR's 2026 response on the 2026 report also acknowledges 'USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan advisory body; its recommendations are not automatic policy,' showing awareness of the distinction, but earlier media posts used the language 'a designation reserved for...' which combines recommendation and designation category in potentially confusing ways. Overall severity is minor because HfHR generally preserves the recommendation qualifier.
What was claimed: Headline reads: 'How the USCIRF continues to designate India as a country of particular concern (CPC).' This frames the recommendation as an active, ongoing designation by USCIRF itself.
What the report actually says: USCIRF recommends; it does not designate. Only the State Department can issue official CPC designations. India has never been officially designated by the State Department as a CPC.
Published March 16, 2026, by author Irfan Khan, covering the 2026 USCIRF report (which documents 2025 conditions). The headline 'How the USCIRF continues to designate India' is a clear escalation: it attributes designation authority directly to USCIRF and implies India has been continuously designated, when in fact USCIRF can only recommend. The body text correctly reprints USCIRF's own recommendation language, creating an internal contradiction between headline and content. This is a significant citation integrity problem because headlines are disproportionately shared and indexed. The article at least notes USCIRF as 'an independent, bipartisan advisory body' whose 'recommendations are not automatic policy,' but the headline framing directly contradicts this.
What was claimed: 'The USCIRF Report blacklists India and recommends to the US Government that it be listed as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC).' Headline: 'India Blacklisted!'
What the report actually says: USCIRF's 2025 report recommends CPC designation. India has not been blacklisted by any U.S. government authority. USCIRF is an advisory body whose CPC recommendations have not been acted upon by the State Department since 2020.
Published March 23, 2026, by Cedric Prakash in Indian Currents. The article introduces a new escalatory term — 'blacklists' — that has no basis in USCIRF's statutory framework. 'Blacklist' implies enforcement action and permanent record; CPC recommendations are annual, advisory, and non-binding until acted upon by the Secretary of State. The article simultaneously uses 'recommends' accurately in the body, but the headline 'India Blacklisted!' and the phrase 'blacklists India' in the body create a severity escalation beyond even 'designation' language. The article also describes USCIRF findings as 'authenticated with hard data and incontrovertible evidence,' which overstates the evidentiary standard of a self-described advisory body operating without in-country access to India.
What was claimed: A September 2025 Senate letter to Secretary Rubio cited USCIRF's 2025 CPC recommendation for Nigeria as factual basis for policy action, with the letter stating 'on March 25, 2025, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) recommended that Nigeria be placed once again on the CPC list.' However, for India, the same senators' social media coverage referenced the letter as regarding 'India and religious freedom' without consistently maintaining the recommendation/designation distinction.
What the report actually says: USCIRF's 2025 report recommended (not designated) India as a CPC. Congressional actors citing USCIRF recommendations in policy letters embed those recommendations as established fact in the public legislative record, creating downstream pressure that may treat recommendation as determinative.
Senator Ted Budd's September 12, 2025 letter to Secretary Rubio on Nigeria (signed also by Hawley, Ricketts, Cruz, Lankford) accurately preserved 'recommended' language when referencing USCIRF. However, the same letter also cited 'The same report suggests that Nigeria is one of the most dangerous places in the world to be Christian, citing 3,100 of the 4,476 Christians killed' — citing the underlying advocacy organization data that USCIRF itself cited, creating a secondary laundering chain. Facebook posts from Senator Budd's official page (March 4, 2026) referenced the senators' letter on India's religious freedom without clearly marking CPC as a recommendation rather than existing status. The Hindu Hindustan Gazette described the letter as senators calling for India to be given 'CPC Tag,' treating the recommendation as a pending designation rather than one of six consecutive unheeded recommendations. Earlier precedent: In September 2020, 15 senators wrote to Secretary Pompeo urging adoption of USCIRF's India CPC recommendation as U.S. policy — the Hindu American Foundation's rebuttal letter explicitly flagged that senators were 'adopting the recommendations of USCIRF as their own,' illustrating the congressional laundering pattern.
What was claimed: 'Beyond the CPC designation, the report recommends specific U.S. actions.' Treats CPC as an already-operative designation ('beyond the CPC designation'), then separately notes the recommendations for sanctions and arms review as additional. The publication also frames State Department non-action as an active failure: 'in each of the past years, the U.S. Department of State has failed to act upon that recommendation.'
What the report actually says: USCIRF's 2025 chapter is a recommendation, not a designation. State Department non-adoption of USCIRF recommendations is within its statutory discretion. USCIRF itself notes 'Then Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken did not issue CPC, SWL, or EPC designations by the end of 2024... Despite that failure to comply with IRFA in regard to those designations' — USCIRF frames non-action as IRFA non-compliance, which Justice For All amplifies.
Justice For All's March 27, 2025 statement uses 'beyond the CPC designation' as a structural phrase that presupposes the designation is operative before noting additional recommendations. This grammatical framing — treating the recommendation as the settled baseline and the other measures as further steps — is a subtle but documentable escalation. The statement also adopts USCIRF's own framing that State Department inaction constitutes 'failure,' which the USCIRF 2025 report states explicitly on page 5. By amplifying USCIRF's own characterization of non-compliance, advocacy downstream actors create a chain in which the advisory recommendation is re-packaged as a legal or regulatory obligation the State Department has violated — elevating the recommendation's perceived authority well beyond its actual status. The organization also states 'USCIRF has been recommending the CPC designation for India since 2020' with the bold phrase 'CPC designation' as a compound noun, where 'designation' becomes the nominal category for USCIRF's recommendation rather than a distinct State Department action.
2 additional citations tracked. View full citation context →
Organization Response
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has been invited to respond to this assessment. If a response is received, it will be published here in full and without editing.
Status: N/A