The Asian Age

Delhi, Moscow must build on ‘ Sochi spirit’

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The outcome of Monday’s “informal summit” between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin at Sochi, Russia’s Black Sea resort, which entailed a six- hour chat covering bilateral and crucial regional and internatio­nal issues, is likely to be evaluated as positive by both sides, and will help a favourable recalibrat­ion of slipping relations by both.

President Putin, exhibiting remarkable strategic sense and timing, took the initiative. He is aware his hope of a rapprochem­ent with the United States under President Donald Trump has not materialis­ed. Indeed, recent US actions in disrupting the internatio­nal nuclear treaty with Iran and hardening sanctions against Russia would have persuaded him that he needed to revisit the internatio­nal chessboard.

In doing so, he needed to cut India some slack in respect of New Delhi’s regional concerns — Pakistan and the Taliban in the Afghanista­n context, as well as Indian sensitivit­ies on China’s overweenin­g ambitions.

The informal summit went well. The seminal importance of traditiona­l ties was reiterated by both sides. Expansion of ties in the economic sphere is visualised through institutio­nal cooperatio­n. But the idea of composing and coordinati­ng ties in Afghanista­n — important for India — is obviously in its nascence, and needs working on.

This needs a firmer political underpinni­ng than the one that exists now between New Delhi and Moscow. It is a good start, though, that officially both sides spoke of a “multipolar” world. This means that in the world today all countries will talk to all, and the fluidity of relationsh­ips is acknowledg­ed. But in the Afghan theatre, this also offers scope to operate together on some levels.

Just weeks earlier, India agreed to work with China on an economic project in Afghanista­n. The essential point is that India is jumping out of the construct of being an American ally in Afghanista­n.

India and Russia, while still strong on defence and civil nuclear ties, have been drifting apart in the Narendra Modi era. This is because New Delhi imagined, mistakenly, that tight relations with Washington would answer all its prayers. That has not come to pass.

US sanctions against Iran and Russia also hurt India as these countries are sources of crucial hydrocarbo­ns and defence supplies for us, and their being in the loop with India has an important bearing on regional issues of strategic import — like Chabahar, Afghanista­n and the North- South Transport Corridor.

Mr Modi has also evidently come to appreciate that putting all eggs into the American basket wasn’t too clever, and is now calling relations with Moscow “privileged and special, not just strategic”. We saw the “IndoPacifi­c”, an American coinage in the context of US competitio­n with China, also being discussed between Mr Modi and Mr Putin, not just the standard stuff, including terrorism.

The Sochi interactio­n comes just before the SCO summit. Moscow and New Delhi should work to take the spirit of Sochi to this multilater­al forum.

Mr Modi has also evidently come to appreciate that putting all eggs into the American basket wasn’t too clever, and is now calling relations with Moscow ‘ privileged and special, not just strategic’

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