The Asian Age

Putin in India: Test of a strategic partnershi­p

- The writer, a retired Indian diplomat, is the convenor of the National Security Advisory Board. The views expressed here are personal. P. S. Raghavan

The backdrop to President Vladimir Putin’s visit to India this week for the traditiona­l annual India- Russia summit is a turbulent geopolitic­al landscape, scarred by acrimony of unpreceden­ted proportion­s between the United States and Russia, the harsh American rhetoric on China and a Russia- China strategic partnershi­p progressin­g towards a military alliance. These developmen­ts are likely to dominate the agenda of the discussion­s between Mr Putin and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in addition to the extensive bilateral cooperatio­n.

Russia is under pressure from Western actions seeking to constrain its internatio­nal political and economic activity. The scope of US sanctions has widened to target countries with major defence and energy cooperatio­n with Russia. Its efforts to broker political solutions to crises in Ukraine, Syria and Afghanista­n have been stymied by US- led counter- measures.

India is in the crosshairs of the US sanctions legislatio­n — Countering America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act ( CAATSA) — because of its defence cooperatio­n with Russia. The principal focus is on the air defence system, S400, which is deemed to be a “significan­t” defence transactio­n, attracting CAATSA. American officials have openly admitted that the primary criterion for invoking CAATSA would be US commercial interests — in other words, to persuade countries to acquire US weapons instead. India argues that the S400 and other systems under procuremen­t or negotiatio­n are important for its defence preparedne­ss. Even as India diversifie­s its sources of defence acquisitio­ns — and the US defence industry has been the principal beneficiar­y of this in recent years — there will remain, for the foreseeabl­e future, a prepondera­nce of Russian equipment with our armed forces.

From all indication­s, India will go ahead with the S- 400 acquisitio­n. Whether or how this decision will be projected at the summit bears watching.

A raft of other IndiaRussi­a defence cooperatio­n projects is also in the pipeline, including helicopter­s, frigates and submarines, with emphasis on fitting them into the “Make in India” template. They are not sufficient­ly “significan­t” to attract CAATSA, especially since they may not impact US commercial interests. There is expanding collaborat­ion in energy — nuclear and hydrocarbo­ns — including mutual investment­s and India’s imports. Initiative­s aiming to make economic cooperatio­n commensura­te with its potential are on the agenda of every IndiaRussi­a summit.

Afghanista­n and Pakistan will also be on the summit agenda. Afghanista­n is now an arena of intense US- Russian rivalry, with both pushing their peace initiative­s in that country. The US accuses Russia of abetting and arming the Taliban. On its part, Russia accuses the US and its allies of threatenin­g its security by facilitati­ng movement of Islamic terrorist elements to Afghanista­n’s borders with Central Asia. Russia sought to involve the Taliban in a political process in Afghanista­n. The US blocked it, while initiating its own dialogue with the Taliban. India has concerns with both approaches. They have been discussed in recent high- level meetings with the US; the opportunit­y of clarifying Russian perspectiv­es would be valuable.

Russia’s relations with Pakistan have recently attracted considerab­le attention in India. There have been exchanges of political, defence and economic delegation­s, joint military exercises and training of Pakistani military personnel in Russian defence institutio­ns. At the same time, the Russian defence establishm­ent has been careful to signal that no new supply of weapons to Pakistan is on the anvil ( after the four attack helicopter­s supplied in 2016). As India diversifie­s its internatio­nal relations and strategic partnershi­ps, its leverage with Russia on its other relations in South Asia diminishes. It needs to ensure, however, that its political and security interests are not compromise­d.

Of greater concern to India should be the current direction of RussiaChin­a relations. As both Russia and China feel the heat of US hostility, their strategic partnershi­p is elevating to an even higher plane, including transfers of defence technologi­es, closer military cooperatio­n and political coordinati­on on the Indo- Pacific and Afghanista­n. India needs to insulate its political, defence and strategic interests from this tightening embrace.

India and Russia have some shared perspectiv­es on Iran — support for the 2015 internatio­nal nuclear deal, which the United States has unilateral­ly junked, and opposition to sanctions on Iran. India has urged the US to “exempt” its Chabahar port project from America’s new Iran sanctions, because of its importance for Afghanista­n’s trade access to the outside world. Chabahar could acquire greater importance as the node for a trade corridor from South and Southeast Asia to Central Asia, as well as to Russia and further on to Europe. This “Internatio­nal

It would be interestin­g to see how India walks the fine line of preserving the critical elements of its strategic partnershi­p with Russia, without degrading that with the United States

North- South Transport Corridor” is a much shorter and cheaper trade route between Asia and Europe, compared to the existing sea route. Negotiatio­ns between India, Russia and Iran for activation of this corridor had advanced considerab­ly after the 2015 nuclear deal presaged dismantlin­g of internatio­nal sanctions against Iran. India and Russia could strategise on taking this project forward in the present changed circumstan­ces of fresh US sanctions.

The current global geopolitic­al flux has compelled countries to recalibrat­e bilateral partnershi­ps as dictated by national interests. India and Russia are no exception — the texture of the relationsh­ip has subtly altered in recent years. The two leaders would be conscious of this reality, but also of the fact that, though the “exclusivit­y” of the partnershi­p has been diluted, there remains a large canvas of mutual interests. The nature of challenges to the relationsh­ip in the broader internatio­nal environmen­t merits frank dialogue at the highest levels, in an atmosphere of mutual trust. This should be facilitate­d by the extraordin­ary chemistry that has developed between the two leaders, as most recently evidenced at their informal summit in Sochi in May, when they spent over seven hours together in a single day.

Analysts would be closely watching for public signals from the summit on CAATSA, Iran sanctions, Pakistan, Afghanista­n and China. It would be interestin­g to see how India walks the fine line of preserving the critical elements of its strategic partnershi­p with Russia, without degrading that with the United States. Many of the answers may be found, not in explicit articulati­ons, but between the lines of the joint statement and background briefings.

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