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India Is Eager for Putin’s Weapons Despite U.S. Sanctions Risk

Putin is making his first foreign trip in nearly six months for talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

India Is Eager for Putin’s Weapons Despite U.S. Sanctions Risk
Vladimir Putin, Russia’s President, gestures as he speaks during a news conference with U.S. President Donald Trump, in Helsinki, Finland. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

President Vladimir Putin visited New Delhi on Monday as billions of dollars of Russian weaponry flow into India that would normally attract U.S. sanctions. Eager to draw India into its efforts to contain China, the U.S. appears to be looking away this time.

Putin’s first foreign trip in nearly six months includes talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi as India takes delivery of Russia’s S-400 advanced missile-defense system that’s part of a $5 billion weapons deal. A similar purchase by NATO ally Turkey prompted the U.S. to ban Ankara from its advanced F-35 fighter jet program.

“It looks like Washington turned a blind eye for now since Indian support in the Asia-Pacific region is extremely important for the U.S.,” said Ruslan Pukhov, a member of the Russian Defense Ministry’s public advisory board. “India sent a strong message to the U.S. that it would not tolerate American sanctions.”

India Is Eager for Putin’s Weapons Despite U.S. Sanctions Risk

India is part of the Quad group with the U.S., Japan and Australia that is shaping up as a bulwark against China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region. Even as U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization tensions with the Kremlin are running high over a Russian build-up of forces near Ukraine, India is betting President Joe Biden’s focus on China will allow it to press on with defense purchases from Moscow.

Russian arms purchases by U.S. allies can trigger sanctions under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act. While the U.S. has “urged all of our allies, all of our partners, to forgo transactions with Russia” involving the S-400 that may trigger sanctions, it hasn’t decided on a potential waiver for India, State Department spokesman Ned Price said at a Nov. 23 briefing.

Conversations are ongoing “in the context of a defense relationship that is meaningful to us, that is important both to the United States and India, including in the context of a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Price said. 

For the Modi government, Putin’s visit means more than just bolstering ties that date to the Cold War era. India needs Russia to keep up weapons supplies as it remains locked in its worst border standoff with China. New Delhi also wants more of a role in Afghanistan where Russia along with China and Pakistan remain key players following the Taliban’s takeover.    

Putin hailed India as “a great power” at the opening of the talks with Modi Monday and the two leaders agreed to boost bilateral trade to $30 billion  and investments by $50 billion by 2025.

India Is Eager for Putin’s Weapons Despite U.S. Sanctions Risk

India will need to watch Russia’s actions on Ukraine as this could complicate New Delhi’s ties with Washington, said Tanvi Madan, director of The India Project at the Brookings Institution. “Delhi says it needs to do certain things with Moscow because it is in India’s interest; Washington says it needs to do certain things with Islamabad because it is in America’s interest,” she said. “Neither likes what the other is doing with its rivals.”

The two sides have signed an agreement to produce more than 600,000 AK-203 rifles in India, a government statement said Monday. But there was no word of contracts on other deals that officials had suggested as possibilities before the meeting, including more Indian orders for the Sukhoi Su-30 and MiG-29 fighter jets as well as 400 extra T-90 tanks and Igla-S very-short-range air-defense missiles that India first ordered when its border confrontation with China was at its peak last summer.

India won’t go ahead with a plan to build Russian Ka-226T military helicopters locally under a $1 billion deal, according to senior government officials with knowledge of the matter. Instead, the world’s third-largest military force might make off-the-shelf purchases as replacements for its fleet of over 320 aging helicopters. 

India Is Eager for Putin’s Weapons Despite U.S. Sanctions Risk

Still, while Russia remains India’s largest weapons supplier, Moscow’s share of Indian purchases declined to 56% from 72% in 2015-2019, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. At the same time, India has increased weapons and technology purchases from Europe and Israel and conducted more military exercises with the Quad nations.

India is also part of a newly emerging partnership between Israel, the United Arab Emirates and the U.S. that plans to cooperate on economic and maritime security in the Middle East.

“The U.S. is not likely to be happy about India’s decision to purchase more weapons from Russia, but will wait to see how many of these deals actually materialize,” said Akhil Bery, Director of South Asia Initiatives at the Asia Society Policy Institute. “However, the U.S.-India relationship is arguably stronger now, as both sides recognize that China is the biggest geopolitical threat.”

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