Kashmir Observer

Old and strong: On India-Russia ties

- The Hindu

It is equally unusual for Russian President Vladimir Putin to meet lower-ranking foreign officials, as he did while meeting Mr. Jaishankar. The warmth was significan­t given that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has skipped the annual leadership summit, an unbroken tradition from 200021, for two years now, leading to speculatio­n about the health of the India-Russia relationsh­ip after the Ukraine war. While India took care not to criticise Russia, worries over the flagging of defence supplies, continued issues over paying Russia for imports in third currencies, and the general decline in other bilateral engagement­s have persisted. It is clear that a large part of Mr. Jaishankar’s mission was to smooth over the perception of difference­s. The resultant agreements, pertaining to furthering collaborat­ion in future Kudankulam nuclear power projects, fostering connectivi­ty, trade and resuming talks for the Eurasian Economic Union-India free trade agreement, and joint military production indicate that bilateral relations are on track. So is multilater­al cooperatio­n, especially as Russia plans to host the expanded BRICS summit next year, and India and Russia continue to coordinate positions at the UN and SCO. Mr. Jaishankar’s announceme­nt that imports of Russian hydrocarbo­ns will continue to rise despite the West’s Russian sanctions, indicated the strength of ties that continue “regardless of political fluctuatio­ns”.

Mr. Jaishankar’s affirmatio­n that the annual leadership summit will be resumed in 2024, appeared to signify that both sides are working to eliminate any static in the relationsh­ip. His statement that the India-Russia relationsh­ip was the ‘only constant in world politics’ over the last six decades would not have gone unnoticed especially in Washington and Beijing, given some of the friction in India-U.S. relations over the Pannun investigat­ion, as well as U.S. President Joseph Biden’s decision not to accept Mr. Modi’s invitation for Republic Day, while India-China relations have ended another year in impasse over the military standoff. It remains to be seen whether the bonhomie will yield concrete movement on the rupeeroubl­e payment mechanism, or on expediting the delayed delivery of S-400 air system units. However, the larger import of his visit, and his words that the “geopolitic­al and strategic convergenc­e” between India and Russia in a multipolar world that is “rebalancin­g”, will be watched most closely by votaries and critics of the relationsh­ip.

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