Putin visit to India balances strained ties: Experts
India to receive S-400 surface-to-air missiles from Russia this month
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s day-long visit to
New Delhi on Monday has been labeled by foreign policy experts as “symbolic” and “substantive,” and an attempt to restore strong Russia-India relations.
Putin and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a meeting on Monday after a two-year freeze on relations. They signed 28 agreements covering bilateral defense and an Indian purchase of 600,000 Russian assault rifles.
Both countries also held their first first 2+2 ministerial talks involving defense and foreign ministers, and held a strategic dialogue to discuss reinforcing ties.
New Delhi and Moscow have a long history of friendship, but the relationship between the two has suffered in recent years following India’s growing relationship with the US, which the South Asian republic considers critical to countering its northern neighbor, China.
In his opening remarks at the summit, Modi underlined the longstanding relationship between India and Russia.
“A lot of geopolitical equations have emerged. But the India-Russia friendship has been a constant among all these variables,” he said.
“It is truly a unique and reliable model of inter-state friendship.”
In his own comments, Putin called India a “time-tested friend.”
He said: “Our colleagues, foreign and defense ministers are here; this is the first meeting in this format. It means that we continue to develop our relations on the international scene and in the military sphere.
“We perceive India as a great power, a friendly nation and a time-tested friend.”
Foreign policy experts have said that the visit was an attempt to arrest the drift in the Russia-India relationship. “Putin’s visit to an extent arrested the drift in the relationship between the two nations,” Prof.
Harsh V. Pant, head of the strategic studies program at New Delhibased think tank Observer Research Foundation, told Arab News.
“The visit went well given that there has been this perception that that the two nations are drifting apart because of China, the Indo-Pacific and the Quad. Russia was vocal in its disagreement of all
those things, and I think this visit seems to be a recognition from the top of the two countries that despite the divergences, they do see great value in keeping each other a priority country,” said Pant.
Russia has reservations over the formation of the Quad, a quadrilateral grouping involving the US, India, Japan and Australia initiated in response to China’s growing assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific region.
Harsh Vardhan Shringla, India’s foreign secretary, said in a press briefing on Monday that “concern over the Indo-Pacific strategy was raised with Russia.”
Putin’s visit also comes at a time when New Delhi’s relationship with Beijing — a close ally of Moscow — is strained. A tense military standoff between the two large Asian neighbors at the Himalayan borders in Ladakh has lasted for more than a year. In a border clash between the two nations in June 2020, at least 20 Indian soldiers died.
“It’s going to be a sticky point going forward, there is no doubt about that. This is a challenge in the relationship,” said Pant.
“India has to convey to Russia how strongly it feels on the China question.”
Pant added that “if the relationship between India and Russia is broad and not one-dimensional, then both nations would be able to tide over these differences on China.”