The Trump administration, which crippled Russia’s oil sales to India with sanctions, will be watching Mr. Putin’s talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia arrives in New Delhi on Thursday for an annual summit that marks his country’s partnership with India. He and Prime Minister Narendra Modi are expected to discuss their defense dealings and announce agreements to ease trade and the flow of workers from India to Russia.
Looming over the bilateral discussions will be a third country whose actions are testing the strength of that relationship: the United States.
The timing is especially fraught for India, which has been searching for a way to resolve its economic tangle with the Trump administration. Mr. Trump has accused India of financing Russia’s war on Ukraine by buying its oil, and last month, India’s biggest oil companies stopped buying Russian crude almost entirely after U.S. sanctions on Russian oil giants threatened the companies that do business with them.
The bilateral summit signals to the world that India and Russia are committed to a relationship that dates back to the Soviet era. For Mr. Putin, it’s an opportunity to show the world that Russia has a partner of global significance.
But Mr. Modi, who shares a warm personal bond with Mr. Putin, will have to walk a tightrope between managing India’s relationship with Russia, its biggest arms supplier, while satisfying the demands of the United States, its biggest trading partner - all while pursuing his country’s self-interest.
What’s on the agenda?
Mr. Putin will arrive in New Delhi on Thursday for the 23rd India-Russia summit. The following day, he and Mr. Modi will discuss ways to strengthen trade and economic ties.
They plan to hold wide-ranging discussions, on topics like increasing India’s imports of Russian fertilizer and the construction of small nuclear plants in India.
A new agreement on labor mobility is also expected, according to the Kremlin spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, and Indian government officials, which would make it easier for Russian companies to hire workers from India. Russia has been facing a labor shortage exacerbated by its war in Ukraine and a decline in migrants from Central Asia.
Successive Indian governments have largely chosen to follow a path of so-called nonalignment, where alliances and partnerships are dictated by India’s own interests, but Mr. Modi has to strike a balance.
Will India resume buying Russian oil?
What about military deals?
What it loses on oil, Russia might gain on the defense equipment front. India spends tens of billions of dollars on military equipment to protect its borders with China and Pakistan. Russia is India’s biggest supplier of weapons, and most of the air-defense systems, fighter jets, rifles and missiles used by the Indian armed forces are of Russian origin.
Although India has been diversifying its sources of weapons, Russian-origin equipment constitutes over 60 percent of its existing inventory, said Happymon Jacob, an expert on international relations. Its dependence on Russia for maintenance, spares and support for equipment including helicopters and fighter jets will continue, he added.
Sources-nytimes




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