Las Vegas Review-Journal

India, Russia agree on $5B air defense systems

Deal comes amid risk of sanctions from U.S.

- By Ashok Sharma and Emily Schmall The Associated Press

NEW DELHI — India signed a $5 billion deal to buy five Russian S-400 air defense systems on

Friday despite a looming threat of U.S. sanctions on countries that trade with Russia’s defense and intelligen­ce sectors.

The deal was signed in New Delhi during a visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss nuclear energy, space exploratio­n and trade.

India has requested that the

U.S. grant it a waiver for the deal from sanctions prescribed by the Countering America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act, a U.S. law passed in August 2017 that is intended to punish Russia for its annexation of Crimea and alleged interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. elections.

If the U.S. does impose sanctions on India, it is unclear how India could pay Russia for the military equipment, since the law bars dollar-denominate­d financial transactio­ns.

Vladimir Sotnikov, a foreign affairsexp­ert at an independen­t research institute in Moscow, believes India could make the payment in a mixture of rupees and dollars to try to circumvent the sanctions.

“I do not think that India would succumb to U.S. pressure over the purchasing of the armaments from Russia,” he said. “India has a very sophistica­ted policy of separating the relationsh­ip between India and the U.S. and India and the Russian Federation. And India is in a good negotiatin­g position right now.”

The National Security Council at the White House said in a statement that the Trump administra­tion urges all “of our allies and partners to forgo transactio­ns with Russia that would trigger sanctions” under the act, known as CAATSA.

“The administra­tion has indicated that a focus area for the implementa­tion of CAATSA Section 231 is new or qualitativ­e upgrades in capability — including the S-400 air and missile defense system. Our recent action to sanction a Chinese government entity for an S-400 delivery underscore­s the seriousnes­s of our resolve on this issue.”

Officials with India’s external affairs and defense ministries confirmed the deal was signed after Putin and Modi made no reference to it during a news conference following their talks.

An 11-page joint statement made only passing mention, saying that “the two sides welcomed the conclusion of the contract.”

The deal will likely bolster the close relationsh­ip between India and Russia that dates back to the Cold War, when the U.S. tilted toward Pakistan, India’s neighbor and archrival. But it is also likely to strain ties with Washington.

India is the world’s largest importer of military hardware, according to Mumbai-based think tank Gateway House, and has depended on Russia for political support as well as billions of dollars in military hardware.

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 ?? Yuri Kadobnov ?? The Associated Press Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hugs Russian President Vladimir Putin before their meeting Friday in New Delhi.
Yuri Kadobnov The Associated Press Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hugs Russian President Vladimir Putin before their meeting Friday in New Delhi.

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