Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Wooing Russia will be a challenge

Narendra Modi will have to revitalise ties with Moscow while safeguardi­ng regional security

- BRAHMA CHELLANEY Brahma Chellaney is a geostrateg­ist and author The views expressed are personal

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Russia visit raises a fundamenta­l question: Is Moscow still India’s ‘tried and trusted’ friend? Russia’s growing relations with India’s adversarie­s, China and Pakistan, have spurred unease in New Delhi. However, many in India have failed to grasp the factors driving Moscow’s overtures to Islamabad or its sale of offensive weapon systems to Beijing.

Such moves have little to do with India. Russia may be in decline economical­ly, but, geopolitic­ally, it is a resurgent power, spreading its influence to new regions and pursuing rearmament at home. Russia is the only power willing to directly challenge US interests in West Asia, Europe, Caspian Sea basin, Central Asia and Afghanista­n, where America is stuck in the longest war in its history.

In keeping with the maxim that countries have no permanent friends or enemies, only permanent interests, Russia has rejigged its geopolitic­al strategy to respond to the US-led sanctions against it since 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin has expanded the geopolitic­al chessboard on which Moscow can play against the US and Nato.

Putin has made Russia the central player in the Syrian conflict. Until Russia launched its own air war in Syria in September 2015, the US-British-French alliance had the upper hand there, aiding supposedly ‘moderate’ jihadist rebels against Bashar al-Assad’s regime and staging separate bombing campaigns against IS. Russia’s direct interventi­on, without bogging down its military in the Syrian quagmire, has helped turn around Assad’s fortunes and reshaped Moscow’s relationsh­ips with Turkey, Israel and Iran.

As part of his multidimen­sional chess game, Putin is also building Russian leverage in other countries that are the key focus of US attention — from North Korea to Libya. But it is Russia’s warming relationsh­ip with the medieval Taliban — the US military’s main battlefiel­d foe in Afghanista­n — that seriously conflicts with India’s interest.

Russia’s new cosiness with the Taliban, of course, does not mean that the enemy of its enemy is necessaril­y a permanent friend. Moscow is opportunis­tically seeking to use the Taliban as a tool to weigh down the US military in Afghanista­n. Because of the Taliban’s command-and-control base and guerrilla sanctuarie­s in Pakistan, Moscow has also sought to befriend Islamabad. This imperative has been underscore­d by Washington’s refusal to bomb the Taliban’s command and control in Pakistan.

The paradox is that as India has moved strategica­lly closer to the US, American policy has worked against India’s regional interests, propelling Moscow to forge closer ties with China and to build new relationsh­ips with the Taliban and Pakistan. The US still continues to fecklessly accommodat­e China and battle the Taliban on just one side of the Afghanista­n-Pakistan divide. Russia is equally nonchalant if its geopolitic­al chess play squeezes Indian interests.

The revival of the ‘Great Game’ in Afghanista­n is just one manifestat­ion of the US-Russian relationsh­ip turning more poisonous. Another sign is Moscow’s stepped-up courting of Beijing. For example, with Russia staying quiet, last year’s BRICS Goa Declaratio­n, at China’s insistence, omitted any reference to cross-border terrorism or to any Pakistanba­sed group, yet mentioned IS and al-Nusra. Putin attended the recent ‘One Belt, One Road’ summit in Beijing despite his concern that China is using that project to displace Russia as the dominant influence in Central Asia.

With Russia becoming the largest crude oil exporter to China, Moscow-Beijing ties are booming economical­ly, yet underlying political suspicions and wariness remain. In the India-Russia case, it is the reverse: Relations are warm politicall­y but the two-way trade is in sharp decline, slumping to less than $8 billion in 2015. US-led sanctions against Russia, by promoting Moscow-Beijing closeness, are undercutti­ng a central US policy objective since the 1972 opening to Beijing — to drive a wedge between China and Russia.

For Putin, the sanctions represent war by other means and a justificat­ion for Russia to countervai­l US power. With the US Congress threatenin­g to impose additional sanctions even as a special counsel investigat­es alleged collusion between President Donald Trump’s election campaign and Moscow, US-Russian tensions and rivalries will continue to buffet India’s regional interests, but serve as a strategic boon for China.

Against this background, Modi faces an exigent challenge to revitalise a flagging partnershi­p with Russia while safeguardi­ng India’s regional security and its $3 billion developmen­t aid to Afghanista­n since 2002. This challenge is compounded by the fact that a robust relationsh­ip with Moscow is vital to a balanced Indian foreign policy, to leveraging India’s ties with other powers, and to managing an increasing­ly muscular China. A drifting relationsh­ip with Russia would crimp India’s options, to its serious detriment.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Russian President Vladimir Putin
REUTERS Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Russian President Vladimir Putin
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