
"The rhetoric and optics of the Russian president Vladimir Putin's visit to India last week allude to the strength of the bilateral relationship: Narendra Modi greeted Putin at the airport with a hug, and the leaders shared a car journey (echoing the limo diplomacy when Putin and Donald Trump met in Alaska earlier this year). In his remarks, Modi referred to Putin as my friend and the India-Russia relationship as a guiding star, built on mutual respect and deep trust that had stood the test of time."
"This was Putin's 10th visit to India since he assumed power 25 years ago, and his 20th meeting with Modi since the latter became prime minister in 2014. However, there is a gap between the symbolism and the substance of this relationship. While Putin pledged uninterrupted fuel supplies to India, the country'a companies are buying less Russian oil in the face of US tariffs and sanctions. Russia and India concluded a string of memorandums of understanding in areas from migration and mobility to health and food security, maritime cooperation, fertilisers, customs, and academic and media collaboration."
"But the anticipated announcements on major defence deals did not happen. India has not concluded any major defence deals with Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022. This has been fuelled by delays in the delivery of several platforms and spare parts as Moscow has prioritised its own defence needs. This is a trend that predates the war in Ukraine as New Delhi has sought to diversify its defence imports and strengthen its domestic production."
Leaders displayed warm optics during Vladimir Putin's recent visit to India, including a hug, a shared car journey, and Modi calling Putin a friend and the India-Russia relationship a guiding star. The visit marked Putin's tenth trip in 25 years and his twentieth meeting with Modi since 2014. Despite symbolic gestures, substantive cooperation showed limits: India bought less Russian oil amid US tariffs and sanctions, even as Russia pledged uninterrupted fuel supplies. Memorandums covered migration, health, maritime cooperation, fertilisers, customs, and academic collaboration. Major defence deals were absent; defence cooperation has faltered since 2022 due to delivery delays and New Delhi's diversification and domestic production efforts, reflecting a decline in the relationship's previous geopolitical heft.
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