By T N Ashok
NEW DELHI: Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in India Thursday evening for a two-day state visit that has become a diplomatic flashpoint, testing New Delhi’s ability to maintain strategic independence amid mounting pressure from Washington and European capitals.
The arrival marks Putin’s first trip to India since the Ukraine war began nearly four years ago, and comes at a moment when India’s foreign policy finds itself under unprecedented scrutiny. After enduring months of escalating U.S. tariffs on Indian goods and Western criticism over its continued energy partnership with Moscow, New Delhi has chosen to respond not with capitulation but with ceremonial grandeur.
Even before Putin’s plane touched down at Palam airport, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi personally greeted him with a warm embrace, preparations in the holy city of Varanasi captured global attention. In Modi’s parliamentary constituency along the Ganges, residents organized what they called an “India-Russia Friendship March,” performing traditional aarti ceremonies before photographs of the Russian leader adorned with vermillion and marigold flowers.
Women held prayer services accompanied by drums and traditional music, while marchers carried banners declaring “Bharat-Russia sambandh zindabad” (Long live India-Russia relations). The event, organized by local groups including Vishal Bharat Sansthan, featured participants chanting “The Modi-Putin duo will bring peace to the world” and “India-Russia friendship is essential for the world.”
The spectacle—unusual even by Indian standards of hospitality—reflected deep-seated gratitude for Russia’s support during critical moments in Indian history, including the 1971 Bangladesh liberation war when Moscow stood with New Delhi against Western pressure.
On Thursday evening, Putin proceeded directly to Modi’s residence for a private dinner—the opening act in an elaborately choreographed diplomatic ballet. Friday’s schedule includes a ceremonial welcome at the presidential palace, a guard of honour, homage at Mahatma Gandhi’s memorial, and formal talks at Hyderabad House before a state banquet hosted by President Droupadi Murmu.
According to officials briefed on the agenda, discussions will span defense manufacturing, energy cooperation, pharmaceuticals, technology transfer, and efforts to rebalance a trade relationship that has swelled to nearly $69 billion but remains heavily tilted toward Russian exports. The two leaders are expected to sign more than 25 agreements, including a landmark labour mobility pact allowing skilled Indian workers to fill labour shortages in Russia’s technology and industrial sectors.
Defense cooperation sits at the heart of the summit. India continues to operate military hardware predominantly of Russian origin—approximately 55% of its legacy systems—and is seeking additional batches of S-400 air defense systems after they proved effective during a brief air conflict with Pakistan in May. Discussions are also expected to cover upgraded BrahMos cruise missiles, hypersonic weapon projects, and long-range missile systems.
Energy remains the quiet pillar of the relationship. Despite Western discomfort, India has become Russia’s largest oil customer, purchasing discounted crude that has helped tame domestic inflation while providing Moscow a critical revenue stream amid sanctions. However, recent U.S. pressure has caused Indian state-owned refiners to pause some Russian purchases, creating uncertainty about future energy ties.
In an extraordinary diplomatic breach, the ambassadors of Britain, France, and Germany published a joint opinion piece in a leading Indian newspaper just before Putin’s arrival, accusing Russia of escalating the war even during peace talks and suggesting Moscow could immediately end hostilities if Putin chose to do so.
The unprecedented public intervention—European diplomats typically communicate such concerns through private channels—drew a sharp rebuke from India’s Ministry of External Affairs, which called the article “unacceptable and unusual diplomatic practice.”
The European appeal reflected deeper anxieties in Western capitals. Multiple European envoys have quietly urged India to use its influence with Putin to push for an end to the Ukraine conflict, citing Modi’s 2022 statement that “today’s era is not an era of war” as evidence that the Kremlin listens to New Delhi in ways it doesn’t engage with Western leaders.
But India has carefully avoided playing mediator, maintaining dialogue with both Moscow and Kyiv without framing its outreach as pressure on either side. For Europe, which has watched India increase Russian oil imports while European nations face energy crises, the warmth of Putin’s Delhi reception carries symbolic sting.
Yet European officials privately acknowledge that India’s strategic calculus with Russia is fundamentally different from theirs—a Cold War-era legacy they neither fully share nor control. The irony hasn’t been lost on Indian policymakers: European nations conducted more than €84 billion in trade with Russia in 2024 despite the conflict, yet India faces harsher criticism.
The Trump administration’s reaction has been more complex. India remains central to U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy as Washington confronts an increasingly assertive China. The Quad partnership, defense interoperability, and technology collaborations have all deepened.
Yet India’s refusal to join Western sanctions against Russia—or curtail energy purchases—has tested American patience. This tension exploded in August when Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods, citing the country’s Russian oil imports as justification. The punitive measure, among the highest on any nation, was coupled with threats of additional sanctions under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act.
For India’s political establishment, the tariff escalation read as economic coercion—and a reminder that even close partners can become unpredictable. Putin’s visit allows New Delhi to telegraph a clear message: it will not allow pressure, even from the United States, to dictate its foreign policy choices.
Still, American officials publicly insist the U.S.-India partnership remains “deep and durable.” Privately, Washington analysts expect India to use the Putin summit to extract concessions from both sides—a classic manoeuvre in India’s strategic-autonomy playbook that allows New Delhi to position itself as an indispensable bridge between rival camps.
Energy markets from Riyadh to Abu Dhabi are monitoring the summit with particular attention. India has traditionally been a major buyer of Middle Eastern crude, but Russian oil now accounts for roughly 36% of India’s imports—up from less than 1% before the Ukraine war.
This shift has dealt a significant blow to OPEC producers, whose share of the Indian market has fallen to a record low of 48.5%. Saudi Arabia’s oil exports to India have dropped to 14-year lows, while Iraq, Kuwait, and other Gulf producers have watched Russian barrels displace their traditional market share.
Any long-term contracts or framework agreements emerging from the Putin-Modi summit could further cement Russian supply dominance in India, complicating OPEC’s efforts to manage global oil prices. The potential for deeper India-Russia energy coordination threatens to create a parallel market structure that undermines OPEC’s pricing power, particularly if similar arrangements emerge with China.
However, recent signs suggest the landscape may be shifting. With Russian oil production commitments to OPEC+ and narrowing price differentials, some Indian state refiners have begun returning to Middle Eastern suppliers. The sustainability of India’s Russian oil dependence—and whether Putin’s visit produces new long-term commitments—will significantly affect global energy markets and Middle Eastern strategic calculations.
Putin’s arrival in Delhi underscores a global order where middle powers hold increasing leverage. India—with its $3.5 trillion economy, 1.4 billion people, and strategic location—is wielding that leverage with growing assertiveness.
After months of confrontation with Washington over trade, India is demonstrating that its partnerships are plural, flexible, and built around national interest rather than ideological alignment. The warmth of Putin’s reception sends multiple messages simultaneously: to Europe, that India will not be lectured; to Washington, that coercion will backfire; to Moscow, that New Delhi remains a reliable partner; and to Beijing, that India charts its own course.
For Western capitals hoping to diplomatically isolate Russia, this reality is unwelcome but increasingly unavoidable. India’s strategic autonomy—long dismissed as rhetorical posturing—is now revealed as operational policy.
As officials in Delhi often remind visiting diplomats: India does not choose sides. It chooses outcomes. And Putin’s high-profile visit, complete with riverside prayers and presidential banquets, is the latest reminder that New Delhi’s independence is not negotiable—even under the heaviest global pressure. (IPA Service)
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