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India-Russia Divorce and its impact on Indian defence

The rub is Russia has announced that it would carry the military exercises with Pakistan again in 2017 as it closed $12 billion in defense deals with India.

It shows that India is totally at the mercy of Russia and Russia does not care about Indian sensitivities.

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/we-are-an-ally-who-stood-by-india-in-darkest-hours-russia.457523/#ixzz4NvQAlrFz

or you could take the Russians at face value when they say they are 'supporting' Pakistan come out of the terrorism catch-22 through these exercises. Ofcourse Russia doesn't care about Indian or anyone else's 'sensitivities'. Just like India doesn't care about Russian or American or anyone else's.

Understand this:

Under Nehruvian Congress, India was non-aligned,
Under Sonia Congress, India was mis-aligned,
Under Modi, India is ALL ALIGNED.

Which is why they buy from US, China, Russia, France...whoever comes up with the best deal. Modi is applying sound business principles to foreign and domestic agenda. Results are clear.
 
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or you could take the Russians at face value when they say they are 'supporting' Pakistan come out of the terrorism catch-22 through these exercises. Ofcourse Russia doesn't care about Indian or anyone else's 'sensitivities'. Just like India doesn't care about Russian or American or anyone else's.

Understand this:

Under Nehruvian Congress, India was non-aligned,
Under Sonia Congress, India was mis-aligned,
Under Modi, India is ALL ALIGNED.

Which is why they buy from US, China, Russia, France...whoever comes up with the best deal. Modi is applying sound business principles to foreign and domestic agenda. Results are clear.


When its about foreign policy which is related to national interest , then Indian Government follows only one policy which is linked to national interest.

Indian leaders have never surrendered thier faith when its about the Indian nation.
 
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Aab kya samajh may nahi aaya.

Soviets and Chinese were fighting together in Vietman and soviets gave Chinese automatic weapons and even satellite images about Indian forces deployment.

When was this ?? spy satellites were not operational in 1962
 
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India-Russia Ties Remain Strong Despite Fears, But Some Creases Need To Be Ironed Out
Ashok Sajjanhar - October 23, 2016, 6:18 pm
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Snapshot


From a review of the recent bilateral and BRICS-BIMSTEC summits, India-Russia ties seem alive and kicking despite apprehensions.

Some hurdles remain, but they can be eased out with the help of a frank, in-depth dialogue between the two old allies.

The annual summit between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit in Goa was watched and followed with considerable expectation and anticipation in Delhi, Moscow and other regional and international capitals.

For some time, it has been felt that the India-Russia relationship has become anaemic and frail and does not command the same salience that it once did in the Soviet days. This is correct to an extent. One could not have expected the relationship to continue with the same depth and dynamism as that which prevailed during the halcyon days – when the Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation was signed in August 1971 to ward off possible intervention by China, the United States of America (US) and the United Kingdom during the war with Pakistan for the liberation of Bangladesh in December 1971.

The Peace Treaty was jettisoned in 1991 at the disintegration of the Soviet Union and after moves by Russia to have a close, strong relationship with the US. This, however, came to nought as the US refused to invest politically and financially in Russia's rise, forcing the latter to plough a lonely furrow.

Ties between India and Russia surged rapidly with the advent of Putin as President in 2000. An agreement to establish a strategic partnership between the two countries, with a provision to hold annual summits, was signed the same year. It is to the credit of both countries that these summits have been organised regularly since then. In 2010, the relationship was upgraded to the level of ‘special and privileged strategic partnership’ and summits continued. The recent summit on 15 October 2016 represented the seventeenth such summit between the two countries.

The India-US-Russia mix

The narrative in India among a section of analysts and the think tank community has been that India has tilted so much towards the US that its partnership with Russia, both strategic and economic, has become lackadaisical and listless. Signing of some highly advanced agreements in the recent times, like Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), with the US has further exacerbated this supposed alienation, as it could deter Russia from transferring its sophisticated technologies to India.

It has also been suggested that India has not invested adequate political capital and attention to build a relation of confidence, comfort and strategic convergence with Russia. This charge appears somewhat misplaced and exaggerated, as Modi has met Putin at least nine times since May 2014. This, in itself, is a large number and equal to the frequency of meetings between Modi and US President Obama over this period.

Russia’s improved relations with China

Russia’s economy has witnessed a steep decline in recent years, particularly after it was subjected to sanctions by Europe and the West on account of the Ukraine crisis and the “accession” of Crimea to Russia. This has nudged Russia into China’s expanding orbit. The rapid fall in energy prices over the last few years and China’s growing hunger for oil, gas and uranium further cemented this relationship. From the Indian perspective, the rising Russian affiliation with Pakistan, whether as a response to India’s cozying up to the US or to genuinely ensure that terrorists and drugs don’t flow into Central Asia and Russia, is a matter of considerable concern.

It was in this context that the Modi-Putin summit on 15 October was being watched with considerable hope and some anxiety.

Building on the strong foundation

The two countries signed 16 major agreements, including two key defence pacts which involved a Rs 39,000-crore defence deal to procure Moscow’s most advanced anti-aircraft defence system, S 400 Triumph, which will provide a ballistic missile shield to India. In another significant accord which can be expected to boost India’s “Make in India’’ initiative, India agreed to initially import and then manufacture Russian Kamov-226 T light utility helicopters. India and Russia will also collaborate to jointly manufacture four state-of-the-art guided-missile stealth frigates.

These defence deals are estimated to climb up to around $10 billion. While the cost of S-400s will be about $5 billion, the deals relating to the Kamov-226 helicopters and the stealth frigates will be worth $1 billion and $3 billion respectively.

Days after the summit, it was announced that Russia will lease out a second nuclear attack submarine of the Akula class to India for $2 billion. The lease of the first Akula-class submarine, INS Chakra, expires in 2021. The new submarine is expected to arrive in Indian waters in 2020-21.

Russian oil major Rosneft has signed a preliminary agreement to ship 10 million tonnes of oil per year to India’s Essar Group.

The two leaders launched the unit two of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant and witnessed the foundation laying ceremony of units three and four. In addition, a decision was taken to build units five and six of the Kudankulam complex and identify the location for the construction of a further six units.

In addition, over the last four months, Indian companies have invested around $5.5 billion dollars in the Russian gas and oil sector.

An important agreement for the joint study of a gas pipeline to India from Russia was signed. In a separate agreement, a Russian consortium comprising energy giant Rosneft, commodities trader Trafigura and private investment group United Capital Partners agreed to purchase 98 per cent of Essar Oil for $10.9 billion. Rosneft also signed an agreement with ONGC Videsh for education and training in the oil and gas sector.

Modi asserted that Russia's clear stand on the need to combat terrorism mirrors India’s own. He added that India deeply appreciates Russia’s understanding and support of its actions to fight cross-border terrorism, which threatens our entire region. This convergence of views was, however, less than obvious during the BRICS deliberations, when Russia did not actively support India to either infuse stronger language in the Goa Declaration or make a compelling case in his plenary statement. In fact, to the consternation of many, the 'T' word was missing from Putin's Address at the BRICS summit, although it did find a short mention in the BRICS-BIMSTEC meeting.

Hurdles in the ties

Notwithstanding the positive results of the bilateral summit, several wrinkles remain in the bilateral partnership that need to be ironed out urgently. One of them is the incipient relationship between Russia and Pakistan in the defence sector. Some analysts in India suggest that since India is not willing to assign a position of “exclusivity” to Russia in defence deals, it is in no position to demand or expect an “exclusive” deal from Russia. This argument is fallacious and does not stand the test of reason.

1. Russia continues to be India's largest supplier of defence equipment. According to the fact sheet published in February 2016 by the Swedish International Peace Research Institute – the most authoritative think tank on armament transfers, Russia accounted for 70 per cent of imports of defence equipment by India during 2011-15 while the US accounted for a meagre 14 per cent.

2. India buys only those systems and equipment from the US which Russia is not in a position to supply.

3. None of the armaments being imported by India from the US or any other source will ever be used against Russia. On the other hand, there is all likelihood that sophisticated armaments that might be exported by Russia to Pakistan will be used against India.

Conducting military exercises with Pakistan for the first time ever, particularly in the wake of Uri attacks, does nothing to burnish Russia’s image in the minds of common people in India who are supportive of a closer India-Russia partnership. It projects Russia in a poor light as a country which is willing to co-habit with a state sponsor of terrorism in exchange for a few pennies. The fact that the exercises were conducted in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and not in Azad Kashmir was touted as a huge concession to allay the anxieties of India. This gives little solace, if at all, to those who are keen to see a more vibrant partnership between India and Russia. Russia’s argument that the scale and range of exercises it conducts with India and the level of defence partnership with India are much more robust and deeply entrenched than its engagement with Pakistan is not valid.

Any such joint military exercise would be viewed by terrorists in Pakistan as international approval or at least condoning of their activities.

India has always been mindful and supportive of Russia's core interests and concerns, ranging from Ukraine and Crimea to Syria, Ossetia and Abkhazia. India has always expressed an understanding of Russia's actions and refused to join in imposing any sanctions against Russia. India would, therefore, expect Russia also to be cognisant and mindful of India's core concerns and interests, particularly with respect to terrorism emanating from Pakistan.

President Putin’s lack of fervent and vigorous support to the issue of combatting terrorism has disappointed several of his admirers in India. While he was willing to speak out forcefully on the issue in the bilateral context, his voice was subdued in the BRICS context. Did China have a role to play in this marked shift in Russia’s position? It is necessary to have an in-depth, frank dialogue with Russia at different levels to remove any misunderstanding and bring bilateral ties on a firm platform.

Ashok Sajjanhar
The author is a former Ambassador of India to Kazakhstan, Sweden and Latvia. He is currently President, Institute of Global Studies.”

http://swarajyamag.com/world/india-...-fears-but-some-creases-need-to-be-ironed-out
 
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Indian-Russian Relations: A Dance Out-Of-Step – Analysis
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Locations of India and Russia. Source: Wikipedia Commons.

By Dr. Sanu Kainikara October 24, 2016

From the beginning of the Cold War, the USSR and India shared a strong strategic military, economic and diplomatic relationship. At the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, Russia automatically inherited this close relationship. This bilateral Indo-Russian relations remained robust even after India decisively opened its doors to the West in the late 1990s. The traditional pillars of Indo-Russian cooperation have remained defence, politics and diplomacy, nuclear energy, space, and anti-terrorism activities. Lately economic cooperation has also been highlighted by mutually setting a target of $ 30 billion in bilateral trade to be achieved by 2025.

Both Indian and Russia are members of important international bodies like the United Nations, BRICS, G-20 and SCO and cooperate with each other in these groups on matters of shared interest. Russia publicly supports India’s bid to be given permanent membership of the UN Security Council. Currently Russia is the only nation, other than for Japan, to have a mechanism of annual ministerial level defence review with India. Further, the Indo-Russian Inter-Governmental Commission (IRIGC) is the largest governmental mechanism that India has with any nation. The IRIGC is represented by all Government Departments and meets annually. It acts as a de facto steering committee on Indo-Russian bilateral relations.

Military and Economic Relations
Military relations between the two nations are governed by the annual Defence Ministerial meetings and has a long historical perspective of more than half a century, starting with the erstwhile Indo-Soviet defence agreements. Russia inherited the Soviet role as an automatic substitute on the political collapse of the Soviet Union. In 1997, India and Russia signed a ten-year agreement for further military-technical cooperation.

This agreement encompassed a wide range of activities including purchase of weapon systems, joint development and production of armament and weapons, joint marketing of the same and cooperation in the development of advanced military technology. The last was later widened to include ‘joint research and development’ of high-end technologies. There was also to be shared training, Service to Service exchanges and the conduct of joint exercises. Two major programmes—the joint development and production of the Fifth-Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) and the Multi-role Transport Aircraft has been agreed upon and is currently progressing, albeit at a slow pace.

On the economic front, bilateral trade is large and in fairly diversified segments such as, machinery, electronics, shipping, pharmaceutical, apparels, fertilisers, coal, aerospace, chemicals and tea and coffee products. In actual terms, bilateral trade accounted for $ 1.5 billion in 2002 and had increased seven-fold to $ 11 billion by 2012, in the span of just one decade. Both governments have placed the development of a bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA) on priority, while other initiatives like the simplification of customs procedures are also being put in place. Likewise, there are long-term supplier contracts in key sectors like oil and gas being introduced. Further, Russia is similarly committed to help in the ‘Make in India’ initiative of the current Indian Government, while being actively engaged in the development of the new Indian concept of ‘Smart Cities’ and the commercial nuclear sector.

The Gradual Loss of Focus
Indo-Soviet/Russian strategic relationship has been an enduring fact since early 1960s with defence trade being the mainstay, especially in the post-Cold War era. However, in the past decade or so Russia’s share of military sales to India has been on the decline. During this period, India with its newfound and enhanced geo-political status has created some amount of strategic rapprochement with the United States. New Delhi has also become a welcome visitor to other Western capitals as an acceptable buyer of military hardware. These developments have unconsciously permitted the defining bilateral Indo-Russian relations to be gradually shifted to the backburner in the broader Indian appreciation of the emerging geo-political environment.

This movement has not been the result of an overnight shift in priorities but an evolution that has been in the making for more than a decade. Its genesis could be traced back to the Indo-US 123 Agreement that was an initiative of the second George W. Bush administration aimed at moving forward the concept of an Indo-US strategic partnership. As an aside, this softening of the US approach to India could also become the defining foreign policy legacy of the second Bush Presidency, considering the on-going mess that it created and left behind in the Middle-East.

From an Indian perspective the breakthrough in its relationship with the US was a watershed moment in its international defence and security engagement. Sanctions against India were lifted leading to an influx of foreign aerospace and defence manufacturers being given access to the Indian arms market. Within a decade the value of the Indo-Israeli defence trade had crossed $ 10 billion and the Indo-US trade had increased to $ 9 billion. As a corollary, this had a direct and adverse impact on Indo-Russian defence trade that had been the centrepiece of strategic cooperation and mutual support between the two nations. Even so, Russia still has a very high defence trade quantity in absolute terms and the recently concluded agreements may continue to maintain the trade at a reasonable level if they are brought to fruition. Currently the only running programme is that of the FGFA which is worth about $ 11 billion.

In recent years the larger Indian defence contracts have all been snapped up by Western defence manufacturers: $ 7 billion for 36 Rafale Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) by the French Dassault Aviation; $ 4.1 billion for 10 C-17 Globemaster strategic lift aircraft and $ 2.1 billion for eight P-8I maritime Patrol aircraft, both by Boeing in the US. It is significant that these aircraft will all be replacements for Russian aircraft that are in service with the Indian Air Force and Navy—the Mig-21 ‘Fishbed’, Il-76 ‘Candid’ and the Tu-142 ‘Bear’. In other on-going tenders, requests for information and evaluation trials, like the competition for the Multi-Role Tanker Transport and both attack and heavy lift helicopters, the Russian platforms that have been offered have fared poorly. It seems highly likely that Russia will lose the decades-ling ‘preferred’ status within the Indian arms industry.

The Russian Reaction
Even a casual observer will be able to notice trouble brewing in the horizon for the bilateral relationship. If Russia perceives that it has lost its ‘preferred’ status it will also downgrade its relationship with India from ‘exclusive’ to ‘preferred’ with all that such a move would imply. This will have to be seen as a pragmatic decision, especially considering that India has already started to broaden its own military import-base, sending a clear signal to Russia that it is no more in an ‘exclusive’ situation.

The basic fact is that Russia needs to sell weapon systems. The reasons for Russia being in this situation are clear to identify, even though they are a Soviet legacy. The military-industrial complex that Russia inherited at the breakup of the Soviet Union has grown to represent 20 per cent of all manufacturing jobs in the country, employing nearly three million workers. The faltering economy at the breakdown of the Soviet Union led to a reduction in military expenditure as a percentage of the GDP from 14.1 in 1993-94 to a mere 3.8 today. With such a reduction in the domestic market, the mammoth military-industrial complex is increasingly dependent on exports to survive. Russia cannot deny the economic need to maintain a high level of military exports anymore.

The Russian reaction to India’s gradual drift towards the West has been to revive a two-year old agreement of cooperation with Pakistan and to take a decision to supply Mi-35 ‘Hind’ attack helicopters to them. Till the signing of this deal Russia had refrained from supplying lethal military hardware to Pakistan in deference to the strained Indo-Pak relations. This unofficial embargo was also a legacy of the Indo-Soviet Treaty of Friendship Cooperation and Peace signed in 1971.

The Pakistan Factor
Until recently the bilateral relationship between Russia and Pakistan was coloured by the Cold War legacy in which Pakistan was treated as a die-hard US ally. Pakistan’s support for the insurgency that defeated the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan was always a sticking point in improving bilateral relations. After decades of frosty relations, Russia is reaching out to Pakistan, creating media speculation that Russia was using Pakistan as a tool to impress upon its long-standing ally India, the need to improve mutual bilateral relations. There have been slow developments in the political, defence and economic spheres between Russia and Pakistan for the paste few years. In the wake of the Western sanctions, Pakistan had provided assistance to ensure food security in Russia.

Russia conducted a joint exercise with Pakistan from 27 September to 10 October to practise counter terrorism and anti-drug trafficking operations. The timing is particularly noteworthy. It was held in the middle of the period of heightened Indo-Pak tensions and rhetoric between the countries after the terrorist attacks on the Indian Army formation stationed at Uri in Jammu and Kashmir. The timing of the Russian overture to Pakistan could not have been more offensive to India. Russian diplomats are stating that the exercise was cooperation in counter terrorism and trying to dilute its significance. However, it is a clear indication of a re-evaluation of Russian foreign policy in the region. The truth is that Russian arms policy in the region is being revised and the exercise and sale of helicopters is a not so subtle warning to India as to how events could play out in the future.

Russia has openly put the agenda of a common interest with Pakistan in economic and security matters on the table. The security aspect is difficult to fathom, unless it is meant to keep the underlying instability between India and Pakistan percolating. The other side of the equation, from a Russian perspective, is its concern regarding the turmoil in Afghanistan. The US withdrawal has created a power vacuum that is facilitating the re-emergence of the Taliban. Russia fears that religious fundamentalism and terrorism that will accompany the rise of the Taliban could spill over to Central Asia, bringing unwanted instability to its ‘near abroad’ and spheres of influence.

These developments indicate that the Indo-Russian bilateral relationship could be entering a new and uncharted phase. However, both sides state that their relationship is set in stone and cannot be influenced by third parties. The possibility of a cloud over the friendship is being carefully down played in both capitals. Even so, the shadow of the burgeoning Indo-US strategic partnership is very visible irrespective of the angle from which the Indo-Russian relationship is viewed. Emerging new synergies are becoming visible. Ground realities also points in this direction. In the recently concluded BRICS summit in India, the Russian President Vladimir Putin made no mention of terrorism, even as the Indian Prime Minister Narender Modi as the host pointedly referred to Pakistan as the ‘mothership’ of terrorism. This could be seen as a direct, if minor, tap on the wrist for India. The misgivings regarding a downslide in the bilateral relations have been further stoked by an overactive Indian media.

For its part, Pakistan is leveraging the newfound friendship with Russia to signal its unhappiness at the downgrading of its strategic relevance by the US. Further, the improving Indo-US relationship has aggravated Pakistan’s anxiety at being left with only the China card to play. By cosying up to Russia, Pakistan is indicating to the US that it still has foreign policy options available. Whether this bluff will be called or not is a moot question.

Russia has further created discomfiture for India, almost like a cherry on top of the ice cream, by its efforts to improve Sino-Russian military cooperation. It has sold the Su-35 fighter aircraft, a heavily upgraded derivative of the Su-27 ‘Flanker’, the S-400 air defence missile system and four Lada-class submarines to China. Considering the mistrust that India has towards Chinese intentions, this action is likely to be viewed sceptically in the policy circles in New Delhi. It might create the impetus for India to turn further away from Russian military purchases: the purchase of Rafale fighter aircraft and the request for information regarding local manufacture of fighter aircraft could be seen as a manifestation of this rift.

India is correct to believe that Russia must clearly articulate its strategy for engagement in South Asia, which has not been done so far. This situation gives the impression that more than an open bilateral relationship for mutual benefit is being fostered by Russia in its overtures to Pakistan and China. Russian intentions are opaque, at least for the time being. China and Pakistan share an ‘all-weather’ friendship primarily aimed at challenging India’s national interests and undermining its security and economic development. It is definite that Russia is aware of this situation. In order to ensure that its Pakistan initiative is not wrongly construed in the Indian polity, Russia needs to create the necessary impetus to reassure and re-build Indian confidence. By equating Pakistan and India in terms of bilateral relationships, Russia is downgrading its ‘special’ relationship with India. The reason seems to be obvious—India’s tilt towards the US in recent dealings. However, moving away from the special relationship is bound to be detrimental, both geo-strategically and economically, for both the nations.

If Russia had carried out a pragmatic analysis of its policy options in South Asia it would have realised that long-term partnership would be better with India than with either China or Pakistan. China’s track record of reverse engineering the Su-27 ‘Flanker’ to produce the ‘indigenous’ J-11B fighter aircraft should have acted as a warning to Russia for future export of high-technology hardware. Pakistan is a proven supporter of religious fundamentalism and terrorist organisations and Russia’s bilateral engagement is a strategic gamble, at best. On the other hand, simultaneous engagement with China, Pakistan and India is indicative of Russia’s intent to be engaged in South Asia far more than has been the case so far. However, Russia’s economic realities have made short-term realpolitik trump long-standing and mutually profitable relations.

The Current Situation
There is no doubt that the Soviet Union assisted India in many ways during the early years of the latter’s independent history, moving it towards self-reliance, becoming a trusted ally and true strategic partner. In the contemporary world of geo-political turmoil and with the scare of economic recession being very real in many parts, India’s rapid economic growth has provided it with increased self-confidence. At the same time Russia has emerged on the world stage as a counterpoint for the faltering Western intervention in the Middle-East. Both India and Russia are playing a larger role than before on the global geo-political environment and both the nations support the creation of a multi-polar world. The contemporary geo-political situation is complex and fast-changing, which necessitates nations having to diversify their foreign policy options. At the same time they will also have to maintain trusted relations on an even keel and nurture them to ensure a base-level stability.

Russia plays a major role in the Indian energy sector, much as the erstwhile USSR did. India is energy deficient and Russia is energy surplus, which makes for a natural alliance. Russia is active in providing assistance in the hydrocarbon and nuclear sectors while India is keen to penetrate the Russian energy market. India’s largest investments abroad in the energy sector are both in Russian projects—a 20 per cent stake in the Sakhalin energy project amounting to $ 2.8 billion and the outright purchase of Imperial Energy, a London-listed oil major in the Tomks region.

The weakest link in the bilateral relations remains trade and economic ties. Bilateral trade is low and there is opportunity to boost the partnership, especially in the private sector. The attempts being made to improve economic partnerships, both governmental and private sector, could provide a new direction to the relationship. The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is an initiative aimed at increasing India’s economic outreach to the broader Eurasian region through Russian ties with Belarus and Kazakhstan.

There is also an expectation that Russia will invest heavily in the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor that plans to connect nine mega industrial complexes spread across six Indian states. Russia is keen to create an economic and trade forum outside of the Western Bloc, especially after sanctions were imposed on it by the US and its allies. There is great encouragement from Russia for the RIC (Russia-India-China) and BRICS groupings. If the nations involved played a straight game, opportunities for bilateral and multi-lateral partnerships to grow and flourish are abundant.

The defence cooperation between India and Russia has stagnated somewhat in the past few years. The Indo-Russian partnership is facing some challenges that need to be ameliorated. Russia is facing intense competition in the Indian defence market from the US, France and Israel. Even so, Russia continues to enjoy a unique position of exclusivity, although the status should not be taken for granted. Russia’s position of pre-eminence can be, and in some cases seems to be getting, undermined by the conscious effort of powerful Western nations acting in concert. It is necessary for both India and Russia to watch out for the thrusts aimed at breaking their strategic relationship. Indo-Russian bilateral ties are built on strong foundations. However, maintaining an uneasy status quo in defence and economic relations is not sufficient for the relationship to progress, especially when sufficient competition exists to thwart forward momentum. Vested interests will always be ready to drive a wedge between the partners.

The emerging partnership between Russia and China will be a concern for India. In the contemporary geo-political environment, the Sino-Russian cuddle can only be considered as a necessary anti-US alliance. Moscow has relaxed the semi-embargo that it had placed on advanced weapon technology exchange with China and also conducted a joint naval exercise in the South China Sea at the height of the tensions in the region following the International Tribunal ruling against China. Although India has officially stated that it accepts the need for Russia to engage with China and Pakistan, there is obviously internal concern regarding the direction of Russian foreign policy advances. Combined with China’s aggressive posture towards India and its incursions into the Indian Ocean, alarm bells must be ringing in New Delhi. India currently has no clear answer to the question, ‘What are the core interests that Russia is pursuing in its new South Asian engagement intitiatives?’

Looking Forward
The on-going and at times rapid developments in the global economic and political environment will challenge the veracity of all bilateral relationships. The current shift towards a multi-polar world will add to the complexity and increase the geo-strategic instability. In turn, these events will create an upsurge in the focus on national interests by individual nations. It is only natural that the Indo-Russian partnership will also evolve contextually. India faces internal socio-economic challenges of a very high magnitude. The political establishment is aware that these need to be resolved in the short-term future if they are not to affect bilateral relations with any other nation. Further, India needs a collective approach constituted of multiple bilateral relations to develop. Its biggest advantage is that while becoming economically stronger, it has the potential to carry smaller economies with it in its upward trajectory. India as an emerging power understands that open and trusted cooperation is the key to achieving this.

India however, cannot expect the rest of the world to wait while its gets it act together. Even trusted and long-term allies like Russia will be impatient and have different domestic issues to address. However, the Russian overtures towards China and Pakistan must be of obvious worry to the strategic establishment in India. In this context, India’s relations with China remains a paradox since it is characterised by political and military abrasiveness and fairly strong, mutually beneficial economic relations. Russian move towards improving its relations with China will upset Indian calculations of balancing the South Asian geo-strategic environment in its favour. In an extreme case, this situation could prompt or motivate India to veer further towards the US. However, such a move in itself may not be in India’s longer term interests.

Any further Indian move towards the ‘West’ carries with it the real risk of the long-standing Indo-Russian partnership spiralling downwards. It is now necessary for both nations to widen the base of contact and to draw up a mutually agreed upon roadmap and work jointly to make that roadmap function. Stagnation of the relationship through taking it for granted breeds familiarity and could lead to contempt—an unhealthy situation for any relationship. The 17th Indo-Russian Annual Summit, conducted on 15 October on the sidelines of the BRICS Meet, has injected the much-wanted energy serum into the bilateral relationship. A number of pending defence deals were concluded and agreements to deepen cooperation in a range of disparate sectors actioned. These include nuclear power, cyber security, trade, investment, hydrocarbons, smart cities and space. The immediate aftermath of these initiatives has been to dispel any doubts that remained regarding the robustness and health of the Indo-Russian partnership.

Even with the slight upswing that the announcements have created in the general perception, a long-term vision for the future of the relationship is still missing. It is apparent that guidance from the highest level of political leadership is needed to shepherd the partnership forward with adequate energy. Only a realistic assessment and acceptance of necessity from both the nations will avoid the relationship meandering into the wilderness where it will wither and dry. Undoubtedly it will be necessary to smoothen the occasional ripple that will upset the equanimity of the partnership, before the ripples develop into waves with greater consequence.

The uncertainties and compulsions of emerging geo-political situations can be seen at play, influencing and shaping the Indo-Russian strategic partnership. In the current time of geo-strategic volatility, every nation must look out for its own interests, continually mentoring long-standing bilateral and multi-lateral relations and monitoring the altering global pecking order and its own status within it. Attempting anything else will not serve the national interest.


About the Author

Dr. Sanu Kainikara
Dr. Sanu Kainikara is a Canberra-based military and political analyst and Adjunct Professor UNSW, and Distinguished fellow IFRS.

http://www.eurasiareview.com/24102016-indian-russian-relations-a-dance-out-of-step-analysis/
 
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Soviets surveillance satellite became operational in 1962 .
oh come on russians and chinese were not on 1 page back then why do u think us reached out to china in late 60s and invested heavily in them
 
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oh come on russians and chinese were not on 1 page back then why do u think us reached out to china in late 60s and invested heavily in them

Vietnam war .

The Soviet Union, in contrast, paid little regard to the situation in Vietnam. Stalin urged China to assist with the supply and development of North Vietnam, which it did through the 1950s.

Between 1956 and 1963 China provided North Vietnam with 270,000 guns, more than 10,000 artillery pieces, 200 million bullets, 2.02 million artillery shells, 15,000 wire transmitters, 5,000 radio transmitters, over 1,000 trucks, 15 airplanes, 28 naval vessels, and 1.18 million sets of military uniforms.

China and the Soviet Union provided massive military and economic aid to North Vietnam, which enabled North Vietnam to fight first the French and then the Americans. Chinese aid to North Vietnam between 1950 and 1970 is estimated at $20 billion. It is thought that China provided approximately three-quarters of the total military aid given to Hanoi since 1949, with the Soviets providing most of the rest.
 
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Is India Losing Russia?
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The two countries still share values, as well as interests.

Nabarun Roy
October 27, 2016

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With the international system in a state of flux, we are witnessing significant political changes between nations. U.S.-China relations have come under great strain, as evidenced by their adversarial stand with regard to the South China Sea. Russia is ceding space to China with regard to East Asia. There seems to be a return to Cold War–like dynamics between Russia and the United States. It is being reported that Russia has placed nuclear-capable Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, which borders Poland and Lithuania. The missiles are capable of hitting targets as far away as Berlin. Their differing positions with regard to the crisis in Syria and ISIS underline the tension between the two.

To the surprise of many observers, India-Russia relations, which have stood the test of time, also appear to have been affected by this trend, with Russia apparently upping its security ties with Pakistan, India’s traditional rival. For many in India, Russia’s decision to go ahead with its Druzhba (Friendship) 2016 military exercises with Pakistan immediately after the Uri terrorist incident, and its reticence in fully backing India on terrorism emanating from Pakistan at the recently concluded eighth BRICS Summit in Goa, are seen as worrying developments. From the perspective of a stakeholder in this bilateral relationship, the questions that come to one’s mind are: How worried should one be about these developments in India-Russia relations? Also, what should be done to ensure that there is no fundamental realignment in the relations between the two nations?


If one disregards the almost seventy-year history of relations between the two nations, it would appear that the observation of Rajan Menon, a close follower of India-Russia relations, is being proven wrong: “The two countries have established substantial trust and understanding, a convergent worldview, and a stake in preserving a relationship that few countries can claim to have.” A perusal of the bilateral relation will show that is all not particularly well. On the security front, the Russians have been stepping up joint military exercises with Pakistan since 2014. The two naval exercises, Arabian Monsoon 2014 and Arabian Monsoon 2015, were followed up by Druzhba 2016, which was a two-week long military exercise conducted in Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province involving seventy Russian service personnel.

While the naval exercises had combating crime groups and drug trafficking as their objective, Druzhba 2016 went a step further and had more conventional objectives, like training for combat in mountainous areas and taking on armed groups. India made its dislike of these military exercises known to Russia when India’s ambassador to Russia, Pankaj Saran, pointed out that “military cooperation with Pakistan which is a State that sponsors and practices terrorism as a matter of State policy is a wrong approach and it will only create further problems.” Parts of Druzhba 2016 were to be held in the Gilgit-Baltistan province of Pakistan, an area India considers to be a part of Jammu and Kashmir, illegally occupied by Pakistan. The spokesperson of India’s Ministry of External Affairs, Vikas Swarup, told the press that “India repeatedly brought up its concerns about the venue of the exercise with Russia” and that the said province was “part of Indian territory.” This led the Russian embassy in New Delhi to issue a clarification that the military exercises would not be held in any “sensitive or problematic areas.” The exercises were subsequently held in Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province.

Additionally, Russia has been selling military hardware to Pakistan. It is believed that the two nations are in discussions regarding the possible sale of Russian Su-35 warplanes to Pakistan. Pakistan also bought four Mi-35 helicopter gunships from Russia in 2015. The Hindustan Times reports that over the last fifteen months, the army, navy and air force chiefs of Pakistan have visited Russia to explore other such military deals. Given the fact that Pakistan is the world’s seventh-largest importer of defense equipment, it could prove to be a lucrative market for Russian arms manufacturers. This could have serious consequences for India-Russia relations.

On the economic front, Russia has agreed to lend $2 billion to Pakistan for the construction of an 1,100-kilometer pipeline to transport liquefied natural gas from Karachi to Lahore. On the diplomatic front, Russia did mention Pakistan in the wake of the Uri attack when it stated, “We note with concern the resurgence of terrorist attacks near the Line of Control. It is alarming and according to New Delhi, the attack on military unit near the town of Uri was committed from the territory of Pakistan.” However, its activity on the issue of terrorism in the context of the eighth BRICS Summit, held in Goa in October 2016, was less encouraging. Many in India feel that Russia was reticent in backing India’s demands and did not push for the inclusion of terms like “nurture,” “shelter” or “sponsor” in the Summit declaration. The inclusion of these terms would have implicitly pointed fingers in Pakistan’s direction. While the declaration called for action against UN-recognized terrorist groups, and named groups such as Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra, it did not name Lashkar-e-Taiba or Jaish-e-Muhammad.

According to Indian strategic expert Brahma Chellaney, “The result was that the declaration failed to mention the most potent form of terrorism in the world, which is state-sponsored.” In the face of opposition from China and its strategy of sheltering Pakistan from India’s diplomatic offensive, Russia simply didn’t stand up for India. This sentiment is illustrated by a headline printed in the Times of India on October 17: “BRICS Summit: China bulldozed India’s security concerns as Russia looked the other way.”

These developments are certainly worrying to those who support positive India-Russia relations. However, once one situates these developments in the context of almost seventy years of bilateral relations, one will realize that downturns and heartburn have occurred in the past as well, with relations stabilizing and returning to normal afterwards. The 1960s were testing times on this front, when Russia started inching closer to Pakistan. Menon points out that in the aftermath of the 1965 India-Pakistan war, Russia diluted its support to India on the Kashmir issue, and “even published material inconsistent with Indian territorial claims against Pakistan.” Pakistani president Ayub Khan’s 1965 visit to Russia raised many an eyebrow in India. A Pakistani military delegation visited Moscow in 1966, to discuss the purchase of weapons from Russia. This discussion was furthered the following year when Pakistan’s foreign minister visited Moscow. An arms deal was finally clinched when Gen. Yahya Khan visited Moscow some time later. High-ranking Soviet officials also visited Pakistan around the same time period included a naval delegation and Alexei Kosygin, head of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. It was not uncommon to hear voices of disgruntlement from Indians, including Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and President Zakir Hussain. Notwithstanding such tensions, the bilateral relation was put back on the rails. Hence, history suggests that the recent developments may just be a hiccup and that talk of bilateral relations fraying is nothing more than scaremongering and, possibly, hyperbole.

This optimistic interpretation is bolstered when one notes that India and Russia struck important defense deals on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit in Goa—such as a $5 billion deal for India’s purchase of the S-400 Triumf surface-to-air missile system. Considered to be one of the most advanced antimissile systems in the world, it will be used to protect to high-value installations. The two countries also signed deals pertaining to India’s import and manufacture of Kamov Ka 226T light utility helicopters. The two countries will also be collaborating in the manufacture of four Admiral Grigorovich–class guided-missile stealth frigates.

Significantly, it was announced that India would also be leasing an Akula II–class nuclear-powered attack submarine from Russia for a sum of $2 billion. Writing in Business Standard, Ajai Shukla suggests that this would not be in addition to the existing nuclear submarine that was leased from Russia (and christened INS Chakra) in 2012. Instead, it will replace the INS Chakra and is expected to join the Indian Navy in 2020–21. Hence, for about two years, India will be in the possession of two such submarines, after which INS Chakra will be sent back to Russia. In order to counter misgivings in India, and to underscore that the bilateral relations were built on trust and time-tested imperatives, a “top ranked Russian defense official” is reported to have remarked that “Russia is a friend, an ally and not a business partner. Russia stood by India during its darkest hours. Next year will mark 70 years of our relationship. It is a long time.”

A balanced, historically informed reading of the bilateral relation between India and Russia suggests that naysayers in India may be jumping the gun in harboring misgivings about threats to a time-tested relationship. However, one factor seems missing in the current bilateral relation that was present earlier, at least on the Indian side: admiration for the erstwhile USSR and some of the values it espoused. Indian-Soviet relations during the Cold War years were based on expediency and also on values. Some of the letters that Jawaharlal Nehru wrote to the chief ministers of the Indian states in 1955 (to be found in his Letters to Chief Ministers, Vol. 4) following his visit to the USSR make it clear that India’s engagement during the Cold War was based on his admiration of the USSR, even though he was aware of its failings. The fact that the “pull” worked both ways is made evident by Nehru, who writes, “I was astonished to find how popular some Indian films were. The names of several films were mentioned to me. The only two I remember now are Awara and Do Bigha Zamin.

Given how central Nehru was to Indian politics, and his ability to shape the political discourse in the country, this sense of admiration for the USSR struck root in the Indian body politic. Bilateral relations based on expediency as well as values lived on, even after his death. As a result, when tensions did emerge between them, as was the case in the 1960s, the “glue” that bound India and Russia at a foundational level ensured that the drift was not permanent. The relationship encompassed the state and society on both sides. A dynamic that encompassed values ensured that things could be brought back on track should the narrower self-interest component of the relationship suffer.

International-relations scholars like Ian Hurd have pointed out that relations based purely on self-interest last as long as clear benefits accrue to the parties concerned. According to Hurd, “Actors are constantly recalculating the expected payoff to remaining in the system and stand ready to abandon it should some alternative promise greater utility.” Such relationships have a tendency to “defect” or have revisionism built into them. However, relationships based on something more than self-interest can check the tendency towards revisionism.

It is but natural that once the Cold War generation fades in India, the attraction and pull towards Russia and its ideals will also weaken. It would not be inaccurate to say that the current generation of Indians is much less enamored with Russia than the previous generation, which grew up in the Cold War years. In fact, the United States seems to have a greater following among the new generation of Indians than does Russia. According to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2015, 70 percent of Indians who were polled viewed the United States favorably, with 75 percent of those in the age bracket of 18–29 seeing the United States in a positive light. Russia trailed the United States, with 43 percent of Indians seeing it in a positive light. While 8 percent of Indians polled viewed the United States in a negative light, twice as many—16 percent—viewed Russia in a negative light.

Should decisionmakers in New Delhi and Moscow want to ensure that the bilateral relationship is not endangered significantly, they need to examine its softer, ideational element. To what extent do values still underpin bilateral relations, and what is the extent of the erosion of values? They need to identify and inject elements into the relation that will buttress the dimension of self-interest with a value-based one. The challenge is made greater given that socialism is no longer the principal vocabulary in the relationship. Some have argued that in order to maintain the health of bilateral relations, scientific and technological relations have to be deepened, joint manufacturing given a boost, and a convergence of views on terrorism put in place. Whether these measures will be sufficient to sustain India-Russia ties in the twenty-first century needs to be pondered.

Should one doubt the efficacy of values in the politics among nations, given the depiction of international relations as the domain of amoral and self-interested conduct in the shadow of anarchy, one ought to pay heed to Henry Kissinger, and the arch-realist’s reasoning for the success of the Concert of Europe system. The Concert system was inaugurated in 1815, in the aftermath of the drawn-out French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars. It consisted of dialogue and negotiation among the great powers, a commitment to the status quo based on conservative values, and modifications of boundaries based on discussion and not the unilateral use of force. It is believed that the absence of systemwide great-power wars barring the Crimean War was due to the Concert system. In the face of increasing offensive capabilities of nations spurred on by the Industrial Revolution; leaders who accepted risk and were interested in pushing the limits of the status quo, such as Czar Nicholas I; and the slow onset of nationalism across Europe, peace in Europe largely held. This was no mean feat.

Kissinger argues in his book Diplomacy that even though the Concert was created in the name of the balance of power, it relied shared values among the great powers. According to him, “There was not a physical equilibrium but a moral one.” The power and value-based components of the Concert system was propped up by two separate arrangements: the Quadruple Alliance and the Holy Alliance. While the first alliance was based on balance of power principles, the second addressed the moral dimension of the Concert system and used religion as a glue to bind the great powers together. The British were not impressed with the Holy Alliance, with Lord Castlereagh referring to it as “a piece of sublime mysticism and nonsense.” Notwithstanding this, it is believed that the Concert system managed to avert great-power wars for almost a century thanks to its two dimensions: self-interest based on balance-of-power calculations, and values. The injection of values through the Holy Alliance had the role of checking revisionist tendencies among the great powers, which was not only dependent on the accrual of benefits.

The fact that India-Russia relations will face setbacks is inevitable. Whether the setbacks will be seen as aberrations, or whether they will herald a sustained drift, will in many ways be determined by the salience of shared values between the two nations.

Nabarun Roy is Assistant Professor at the Department of International Relations at the South Asian University, New Delhi, India. He obtained his PhD from Carleton University, Ottawa. He focuses on theories of international relations, great power politics, Indian foreign policy and the geopolitics of Asia.

Image: INS Vikramaditya with a Sea Harrier. Wikimedia Commons/Creative Commons/Indian Navy


http://nationalinterest.org/feature/india-losing-russia-18208?page=show

 
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Is India Losing Russia?
india_4.jpg

The two countries still share values, as well as interests.

Nabarun Roy
October 27, 2016

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With the international system in a state of flux, we are witnessing significant political changes between nations. U.S.-China relations have come under great strain, as evidenced by their adversarial stand with regard to the South China Sea. Russia is ceding space to China with regard to East Asia. There seems to be a return to Cold War–like dynamics between Russia and the United States. It is being reported that Russia has placed nuclear-capable Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, which borders Poland and Lithuania. The missiles are capable of hitting targets as far away as Berlin. Their differing positions with regard to the crisis in Syria and ISIS underline the tension between the two.

To the surprise of many observers, India-Russia relations, which have stood the test of time, also appear to have been affected by this trend, with Russia apparently upping its security ties with Pakistan, India’s traditional rival. For many in India, Russia’s decision to go ahead with its Druzhba (Friendship) 2016 military exercises with Pakistan immediately after the Uri terrorist incident, and its reticence in fully backing India on terrorism emanating from Pakistan at the recently concluded eighth BRICS Summit in Goa, are seen as worrying developments. From the perspective of a stakeholder in this bilateral relationship, the questions that come to one’s mind are: How worried should one be about these developments in India-Russia relations? Also, what should be done to ensure that there is no fundamental realignment in the relations between the two nations?


If one disregards the almost seventy-year history of relations between the two nations, it would appear that the observation of Rajan Menon, a close follower of India-Russia relations, is being proven wrong: “The two countries have established substantial trust and understanding, a convergent worldview, and a stake in preserving a relationship that few countries can claim to have.” A perusal of the bilateral relation will show that is all not particularly well. On the security front, the Russians have been stepping up joint military exercises with Pakistan since 2014. The two naval exercises, Arabian Monsoon 2014 and Arabian Monsoon 2015, were followed up by Druzhba 2016, which was a two-week long military exercise conducted in Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province involving seventy Russian service personnel.

While the naval exercises had combating crime groups and drug trafficking as their objective, Druzhba 2016 went a step further and had more conventional objectives, like training for combat in mountainous areas and taking on armed groups. India made its dislike of these military exercises known to Russia when India’s ambassador to Russia, Pankaj Saran, pointed out that “military cooperation with Pakistan which is a State that sponsors and practices terrorism as a matter of State policy is a wrong approach and it will only create further problems.” Parts of Druzhba 2016 were to be held in the Gilgit-Baltistan province of Pakistan, an area India considers to be a part of Jammu and Kashmir, illegally occupied by Pakistan. The spokesperson of India’s Ministry of External Affairs, Vikas Swarup, told the press that “India repeatedly brought up its concerns about the venue of the exercise with Russia” and that the said province was “part of Indian territory.” This led the Russian embassy in New Delhi to issue a clarification that the military exercises would not be held in any “sensitive or problematic areas.” The exercises were subsequently held in Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province.

Additionally, Russia has been selling military hardware to Pakistan. It is believed that the two nations are in discussions regarding the possible sale of Russian Su-35 warplanes to Pakistan. Pakistan also bought four Mi-35 helicopter gunships from Russia in 2015. The Hindustan Times reports that over the last fifteen months, the army, navy and air force chiefs of Pakistan have visited Russia to explore other such military deals. Given the fact that Pakistan is the world’s seventh-largest importer of defense equipment, it could prove to be a lucrative market for Russian arms manufacturers. This could have serious consequences for India-Russia relations.

On the economic front, Russia has agreed to lend $2 billion to Pakistan for the construction of an 1,100-kilometer pipeline to transport liquefied natural gas from Karachi to Lahore. On the diplomatic front, Russia did mention Pakistan in the wake of the Uri attack when it stated, “We note with concern the resurgence of terrorist attacks near the Line of Control. It is alarming and according to New Delhi, the attack on military unit near the town of Uri was committed from the territory of Pakistan.” However, its activity on the issue of terrorism in the context of the eighth BRICS Summit, held in Goa in October 2016, was less encouraging. Many in India feel that Russia was reticent in backing India’s demands and did not push for the inclusion of terms like “nurture,” “shelter” or “sponsor” in the Summit declaration. The inclusion of these terms would have implicitly pointed fingers in Pakistan’s direction. While the declaration called for action against UN-recognized terrorist groups, and named groups such as Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra, it did not name Lashkar-e-Taiba or Jaish-e-Muhammad.

According to Indian strategic expert Brahma Chellaney, “The result was that the declaration failed to mention the most potent form of terrorism in the world, which is state-sponsored.” In the face of opposition from China and its strategy of sheltering Pakistan from India’s diplomatic offensive, Russia simply didn’t stand up for India. This sentiment is illustrated by a headline printed in the Times of India on October 17: “BRICS Summit: China bulldozed India’s security concerns as Russia looked the other way.”

These developments are certainly worrying to those who support positive India-Russia relations. However, once one situates these developments in the context of almost seventy years of bilateral relations, one will realize that downturns and heartburn have occurred in the past as well, with relations stabilizing and returning to normal afterwards. The 1960s were testing times on this front, when Russia started inching closer to Pakistan. Menon points out that in the aftermath of the 1965 India-Pakistan war, Russia diluted its support to India on the Kashmir issue, and “even published material inconsistent with Indian territorial claims against Pakistan.” Pakistani president Ayub Khan’s 1965 visit to Russia raised many an eyebrow in India. A Pakistani military delegation visited Moscow in 1966, to discuss the purchase of weapons from Russia. This discussion was furthered the following year when Pakistan’s foreign minister visited Moscow. An arms deal was finally clinched when Gen. Yahya Khan visited Moscow some time later. High-ranking Soviet officials also visited Pakistan around the same time period included a naval delegation and Alexei Kosygin, head of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. It was not uncommon to hear voices of disgruntlement from Indians, including Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and President Zakir Hussain. Notwithstanding such tensions, the bilateral relation was put back on the rails. Hence, history suggests that the recent developments may just be a hiccup and that talk of bilateral relations fraying is nothing more than scaremongering and, possibly, hyperbole.

This optimistic interpretation is bolstered when one notes that India and Russia struck important defense deals on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit in Goa—such as a $5 billion deal for India’s purchase of the S-400 Triumf surface-to-air missile system. Considered to be one of the most advanced antimissile systems in the world, it will be used to protect to high-value installations. The two countries also signed deals pertaining to India’s import and manufacture of Kamov Ka 226T light utility helicopters. The two countries will also be collaborating in the manufacture of four Admiral Grigorovich–class guided-missile stealth frigates.

Significantly, it was announced that India would also be leasing an Akula II–class nuclear-powered attack submarine from Russia for a sum of $2 billion. Writing in Business Standard, Ajai Shukla suggests that this would not be in addition to the existing nuclear submarine that was leased from Russia (and christened INS Chakra) in 2012. Instead, it will replace the INS Chakra and is expected to join the Indian Navy in 2020–21. Hence, for about two years, India will be in the possession of two such submarines, after which INS Chakra will be sent back to Russia. In order to counter misgivings in India, and to underscore that the bilateral relations were built on trust and time-tested imperatives, a “top ranked Russian defense official” is reported to have remarked that “Russia is a friend, an ally and not a business partner. Russia stood by India during its darkest hours. Next year will mark 70 years of our relationship. It is a long time.”

A balanced, historically informed reading of the bilateral relation between India and Russia suggests that naysayers in India may be jumping the gun in harboring misgivings about threats to a time-tested relationship. However, one factor seems missing in the current bilateral relation that was present earlier, at least on the Indian side: admiration for the erstwhile USSR and some of the values it espoused. Indian-Soviet relations during the Cold War years were based on expediency and also on values. Some of the letters that Jawaharlal Nehru wrote to the chief ministers of the Indian states in 1955 (to be found in his Letters to Chief Ministers, Vol. 4) following his visit to the USSR make it clear that India’s engagement during the Cold War was based on his admiration of the USSR, even though he was aware of its failings. The fact that the “pull” worked both ways is made evident by Nehru, who writes, “I was astonished to find how popular some Indian films were. The names of several films were mentioned to me. The only two I remember now are Awara and Do Bigha Zamin.

Given how central Nehru was to Indian politics, and his ability to shape the political discourse in the country, this sense of admiration for the USSR struck root in the Indian body politic. Bilateral relations based on expediency as well as values lived on, even after his death. As a result, when tensions did emerge between them, as was the case in the 1960s, the “glue” that bound India and Russia at a foundational level ensured that the drift was not permanent. The relationship encompassed the state and society on both sides. A dynamic that encompassed values ensured that things could be brought back on track should the narrower self-interest component of the relationship suffer.

International-relations scholars like Ian Hurd have pointed out that relations based purely on self-interest last as long as clear benefits accrue to the parties concerned. According to Hurd, “Actors are constantly recalculating the expected payoff to remaining in the system and stand ready to abandon it should some alternative promise greater utility.” Such relationships have a tendency to “defect” or have revisionism built into them. However, relationships based on something more than self-interest can check the tendency towards revisionism.

It is but natural that once the Cold War generation fades in India, the attraction and pull towards Russia and its ideals will also weaken. It would not be inaccurate to say that the current generation of Indians is much less enamored with Russia than the previous generation, which grew up in the Cold War years. In fact, the United States seems to have a greater following among the new generation of Indians than does Russia. According to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2015, 70 percent of Indians who were polled viewed the United States favorably, with 75 percent of those in the age bracket of 18–29 seeing the United States in a positive light. Russia trailed the United States, with 43 percent of Indians seeing it in a positive light. While 8 percent of Indians polled viewed the United States in a negative light, twice as many—16 percent—viewed Russia in a negative light.

Should decisionmakers in New Delhi and Moscow want to ensure that the bilateral relationship is not endangered significantly, they need to examine its softer, ideational element. To what extent do values still underpin bilateral relations, and what is the extent of the erosion of values? They need to identify and inject elements into the relation that will buttress the dimension of self-interest with a value-based one. The challenge is made greater given that socialism is no longer the principal vocabulary in the relationship. Some have argued that in order to maintain the health of bilateral relations, scientific and technological relations have to be deepened, joint manufacturing given a boost, and a convergence of views on terrorism put in place. Whether these measures will be sufficient to sustain India-Russia ties in the twenty-first century needs to be pondered.

Should one doubt the efficacy of values in the politics among nations, given the depiction of international relations as the domain of amoral and self-interested conduct in the shadow of anarchy, one ought to pay heed to Henry Kissinger, and the arch-realist’s reasoning for the success of the Concert of Europe system. The Concert system was inaugurated in 1815, in the aftermath of the drawn-out French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars. It consisted of dialogue and negotiation among the great powers, a commitment to the status quo based on conservative values, and modifications of boundaries based on discussion and not the unilateral use of force. It is believed that the absence of systemwide great-power wars barring the Crimean War was due to the Concert system. In the face of increasing offensive capabilities of nations spurred on by the Industrial Revolution; leaders who accepted risk and were interested in pushing the limits of the status quo, such as Czar Nicholas I; and the slow onset of nationalism across Europe, peace in Europe largely held. This was no mean feat.

Kissinger argues in his book Diplomacy that even though the Concert was created in the name of the balance of power, it relied shared values among the great powers. According to him, “There was not a physical equilibrium but a moral one.” The power and value-based components of the Concert system was propped up by two separate arrangements: the Quadruple Alliance and the Holy Alliance. While the first alliance was based on balance of power principles, the second addressed the moral dimension of the Concert system and used religion as a glue to bind the great powers together. The British were not impressed with the Holy Alliance, with Lord Castlereagh referring to it as “a piece of sublime mysticism and nonsense.” Notwithstanding this, it is believed that the Concert system managed to avert great-power wars for almost a century thanks to its two dimensions: self-interest based on balance-of-power calculations, and values. The injection of values through the Holy Alliance had the role of checking revisionist tendencies among the great powers, which was not only dependent on the accrual of benefits.

The fact that India-Russia relations will face setbacks is inevitable. Whether the setbacks will be seen as aberrations, or whether they will herald a sustained drift, will in many ways be determined by the salience of shared values between the two nations.

Nabarun Roy is Assistant Professor at the Department of International Relations at the South Asian University, New Delhi, India. He obtained his PhD from Carleton University, Ottawa. He focuses on theories of international relations, great power politics, Indian foreign policy and the geopolitics of Asia.

Image: INS Vikramaditya with a Sea Harrier. Wikimedia Commons/Creative Commons/Indian Navy


http://nationalinterest.org/feature/india-losing-russia-18208?page=show
https://defence.pk/threads/with-win...ge-on-existing-inventory.458260/#post-8857734

Nasty divorce .. !
 
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Indo-Russian relationship is a one way street at this time.

India is desperate to maintain the relationship while Russia just ignores and flirts with Pakistan.

As India announced IGA for S-400s Russia announced continued military exercises with Pakistan in 2017.
SO ? recently India -china also did joint exercise.
 
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SO ? recently India -china also did joint exercise.

And China Vetoed India's case for NSG & Action against JeM.

It is despicable to even have a financially relation with China let alone a military exercise.

It shows how bankrupt India has become with its foreign policy.
 
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And China Vetoed India's case for NSG & Action against JeM.

It is despicable to even have a financially relation with China let alone a military exercise.

It shows how bankrupt India has become with its foreign policy.
but the relation with china is till going .. right ?
 
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