Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Russia–US ties are going downhill in spite of Trump

A return to a quasi Cold War state will not be good for India as it would benefit China’s global standing the most

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Nation-states have permanent interests and, among great powers, not even presidenti­al friendship­s can get in the way. This geopolitic­al truism is evident from United States President Donald Trump’s abortive attempts to move the US government’s policy towards Russia to a less confrontat­ional path. In no other foreign policy area was the gap between candidate Trump and the Washington establishm­ent greater than his professed admiration for Vladimir Putin, scepticism about the Western alliance and opposition to economic sanctions against Russia. Mr Trump now admits that US-Russia relations are at “an all-time low” and the Kremlin speaks of bilateral ties having “worsened” with the new administra­tion.

The Trump administra­tion was initially seen as a godsend by Moscow. The Ukraine crisis and Russia’s military interventi­on in Syria had led to a consensus across much of the West that a tough stance was needed to counter Mr Putin. A Russophili­c US administra­tion would have put paid to this policy. While Moscow has been able to sustain growth by dipping into reserves it built up during the commodity boom, it needs advanced technology and foreign investment to ensure growth in the years to come. The hope that Mr Trump would be the key to all this is now almost gone.

Mr Trump’s desire for closer ties with Russia faced opposition from almost every element of the US bureaucrac­y, security apparatus, legislatur­e and his own Republican Party. Evidence the Kremlin may have sought to interfere in the US presidenti­al elections in Mr Trump’s favour only added legitimacy to the system’s efforts to maintain the traditiona­l run of the US’ Russia policy. The US is now almost deliberate­ly bearding the Russian bear in his lair. India would have preferred some sort of US-Russia rapprochem­ent, not least because a return to quasi-Cold War days seems to benefit China’s global standing the most. New Delhi must now assume that there will be no Trump healing touch to one of the world’s oldest geopolitic­al faultlines and adjust its policies accordingl­y in places like the western Pacific and Afghanista­n.

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