Business Standard

Russia is a valuable partner, but it will at best be neutral

Its thriving economic relationsh­ip with China is essential to its prosperity

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India invests in its relationsh­ip with Russia, but increasing­ly in return for neutrality rather than support. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh (pictured) visited Moscow to help mark World War II Victory Day just after External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar attended a virtual Russia-india-china summit hosted by Moscow. The defence minister asked Russia to speed up its delivery of the first battery of the S-400 air defence system. He did not ask Moscow to reconsider its steadfast neutrality during the altercatio­n along the Sino-indian border. Russia is not the Soviet Union. Its economy is half the size of India and its enormous economic relationsh­ip with China is essential to its prosperity. The two have a crude geopolitic­al convergenc­e in their common antagonism towards the United States. Moscow supplies arms and hydrocarbo­ns to both India and China. Russia is powerful enough to maintain relationsh­ips with both, but not strong enough to choose between them. And Russia sees its interests in maintainin­g this position.

New Delhi has already begun seeking to reset its relationsh­ip, especially as the defence element is starting to fade. Energy and strategic minerals are now rising in importance between the two countries and this is evident in the bilateral investment figures. More difference­s will crop up, as is evident already over Afghanista­n, as the knob on bilateral ties is turned down from special to normal. All this flows naturally from a changing global order and New Delhi should adjust its policies without sentiment.

Hindustan Times, June 26

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