What was claimed: In the period following the 2017 report (and in sustained advocacy through 2020-2021), IAMC treated USCIRF's advisory Tier 2 designation and accompanying CPC-eligibility language as functionally equivalent to a formal CPC designation. IAMC press releases in subsequent years routinely described India as being in USCIRF's 'blacklist' and urged the State Department to 'immediately act' on recommendations — framing USCIRF's non-binding advisory output as an actionable finding of systematic, ongoing, egregious violations. By 2021, IAMC was characterizing prior Tier 2 years (including 2017) retroactively as confirming that India had been identified as 'one of the world's worst violators of religious freedoms.'
What the report actually says: In 2017, USCIRF placed India on Tier 2 — a monitoring category defined as countries where violations are serious but meet only one or two, not all three, of the 'systematic, ongoing, and egregious' CPC criteria. This is categorically distinct from a CPC designation (reserved for worst violators such as North Korea, China, Saudi Arabia). The 2017 chapter made no recommendation for CPC designation and included an internal dissenting statement from Commissioner Tenzin Dorjee calling the Tier 2 placement 'unfortunate' given that 19 of 29 states had no severe violations.
IAMC was an active civil society source for USCIRF's India findings — the 2017 chapter drew on reports from religious minority communities who 'reported to USCIRF that incidents had increased.' This creates a circular pattern: IAMC and affiliated Muslim community organizations provide testimony or documentation that feeds into USCIRF's findings, then IAMC cites those USCIRF findings as independent U.S. government validation of their pre-existing advocacy claims. IAMC's press release pattern in 2021 (after India's first CPC recommendation) explicitly stated that the CPC recommendation confirmed what IAMC had 'led' campaigns about since 2020, referencing prior Tier 2 years as a trajectory toward the CPC label. IAMC by 2021 co-signed a letter to USCIRF alongside Hindus for Human Rights (founded 2019), ICC, and others, demonstrating coalition building that began crystallizing around the 2017 report period. No IAMC press release specifically dated to April–May 2017 responding to the annual report has been located, but IAMC's ongoing pattern of immediately lauding and amplifying each USCIRF report is well-documented (e.g., 2021, 2025, 2026 press releases), and the 2017 report served as a key citation node in IAMC's subsequent advocacy timeline.