Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Defence buys won’t be dictated by US’

- Jayanth Jacob jayanth.jacob@hindustant­imes.com

OFFICIALS SAY US SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA WON’T IMPACT INDIA’S DEFENCE PURCHASES FROM MOSCOW

The Indo-Russian relationsh­ip was a stabilisin­g factor in a fast changing regional and global order, persons familiar with the planning of the May 21 meeting between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday.

The PM would be in Sochi for a “four- six hour” informal summit, which would mostly be a series of one-to-ones with Putin, “an old friend and a trusted partner”, a source said.

India’s defence purchases wouldn’t be dictated by another country such as the US, said the source on New Delhi’s view on the US sanctions on Russia impacting country’s defence purchases from Moscow.

Russia continues to be India’s biggest arms supplier, though its share in Delhi’s weapon imports has dropped from 79% in 2008-12 to 62% in 2012-17, according to the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

India is purchasing five S-400 Triumf systems, an anti-aircraft missile array that can also intercept missiles, in an estimated $6 billion-deal that comes at a time when the Trump administra­tion is planning more sanctions against Russia.

Signed by President Donald Trump in 2017, the Countering America’s Adversarie­s through Sanctions Act targets any country trading with Russia’s defence and intelligen­ce sectors.

Looking at the big picture, a second source said the meeting was not aimed at any one country or countries but the message was that the India-Russia relationsh­ip was a factor of stability.

The meeting comes amid geopolitic­al shifts. Once close partners, India and Russia have grown a bit distant. While Russia’s ties with the US are worsening, it is getting close to China and also building a relationsh­ip with Pakistan, which is not lost on New Delhi. India had conveyed its concerns about Pakistan, which Russia understood.

Another source said India’s ties with Russia were deeprooted. “The relation is big, and strategic enough to address these difference­s,” the source said.

Since the two leaders will meet for the annual bilateral summit later in the year, the informal meeting will have a limited bilateral agenda and would be a broad exchange of views on internatio­nal issues.

A Eurasian Economic Union, North-South corridor, Afghanista­n, and Iran nuclear deal could figure in the talks, the source said.

The two leaders could also discuss how India could benefit from Putin’s economic policies.

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