The thirteenth Indo-Russian Summit was a fleeting affair, with
President Putin spending less than twenty-four hours in Delhi. It came
as the stakes in the extended neighbourhood are growing higher –
Afghanistan, Iran, and the broader West Asian region are all in a state
of flux that has serious implications for both India and Russia. Similar
stakes are in play in the East, and once more, as India seeks to step
up its engagement in the Asia-Pacific Region, there are implications for
our interface with Russia here too.
The bilaterals are reasonably well-known, and there are serious
attempts ongoing at all levels to find ways to deepen the engagement,
and to find solutions to issues that have dominated the discourse over
the past few years – the Vikramaditya, the nuclear liability, the low
levels of trade and investment, etc. So, too, are the benefits of the
cooperation, whether it is INS Chakra, or Brahmos, or diplomatic support
on key issues like permanent membership of the UN Security Council,
which we take for granted from a country like Russia.
There are also problematic issues that need to be addressed, and were
discussed in some detail. Apart from the issues of our defence
cooperation, there were the nuclear liability question, and that of the
2G license for the Sistema-majority owned SSTL. On these, there is
nothing in the public domain, but the Russian press commentaries have
suggested that the nuclear liability issue could be resolved by raising
the cost of the projects, thus building in some element of protection in
the event that the supplier has to pay compensation. On the Sistema
issue, there does not seem to have been much progress.
Where there was welcome progress, it was on the purchase of LNG from
Russia. This is an issue that has long been discussed, including at the
highest levels. However, while there had been no progress so far, we
seem to have made the breakthrough. Of course, there is a better way to
take this forward to higher levels: this would involve a four-way swap
arrangement, involving the Persian Gulf suppliers, and their buyers in
East Asia [South Korea, Japan], India and Russia. The swap arrangement
would involve the Gulf suppliers diverting their supplies to East Asia
to India; in return, Russia would make good the diverted deliveries and
supply to East Asia. All four parties would gain from reduced
transportation costs, and that would be welcome in these times, when all
major economies are facing difficult challenges.
Another noteworthy outcome of the visit was the reference to the
discussions between India and the Eurasian Economic Commission on a
possible Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement. There has been
one such study done between India and Russia in 2007, but that was never
seriously pursued. Now that Russia has formed the Customs Union with
Belarus and Kazakhstan, it is a good time to launch another such
examination. Hopefully, this can provide answers to the current slow
growth of economic relations between India and Russia.
However, there is insufficient attention being paid to the regional
issues that affect both India and Russia, and on which there is not
enough dialogue at the official level, and which do not get sufficient
attention among commentators. And it is important to understand these
issues from the Russian perspective. That way, we shall not face any
surprises in what our friends in Moscow do, and they, in turn, will
understand how we in New Delhi are looking at things and deciding on
policy choices.
Without doubt, the most important is Afghanistan and the impending
pull-out/thinning out of the ISAF in 2014. From our perspective, things
do not look very reassuring: recent reports of the activities of the
High Peace Council suggest that a serious effort is in hand to pave the
way for the Taliban to return to at least some share in power in Kabul,
with Pakistan being accepted as the major arbiter. The accepted view is
that the US is agreeable to such a dispensation, as is NATO. China, of
course, will back Pakistan. Alone among the major powers, then, Russia
could be expected to show some understanding of the Indian fears over
such a plan.
Regrettably, we are not seeing enough engagement between India and
Russia on this issue, even though both countries share similar
approaches. Indeed, we had collaborated in the 1990’s – a time when
Russia under Yeltsin had not fully recovered from the trauma of the
destruction of the USSR – in order to blunt the Taliban offensive inside
Afghanistan. Today, what we are seeing is Pakistani service chiefs
visiting Russia, the DG ISI in Moscow, and the Pakistan President
offering Russia access to the warm waters on his own visit. There is a
real risk of our being isolated, all the more so because we are also
seeking to put distance between ourselves and Iran – the other country
that might be expected to share our concerns over the plans for
post-2014 Afghanistan. This remains true, notwithstanding the high-level
bilateral contacts we have maintained with Iran over the years.
The second issue of concern flows from the Iran situation, and the
related one of Syria’s future. During the Putin visit, the two sides
found agreement on Iran’s right to peaceful uses of, and research in,
nuclear energy, while calling for all issues to be settled by peaceful
means only. On Syria, too, there is common ground in terms of the UN
Resolutions and a call to all sides to seek a peaceful settlement. But,
of course, there will be no peaceful settlement that is the one thing
all sides are agreed upon. But, more important, shorn of this kind of
fudge, there are clear differences between India and Russia on how to
approach both Iran and Syria. It is instructive to compare what we have
said in the current Joint Statement, and what the Russians said with the
Chinese when Putin visited Beijing in June 2012. The Russian-Chinese
statement contained a more forthright expression of support for Syrian
independence and territorial integrity; it also spoke bluntly against
foreign interference and said that the two countries were “resolutely
opposed the attempt to resolve the Syrian crisis by way of foreign armed
intervention and imposition of ‘regime change’. This would suggest that
the Russian position on Syria did not get the full endorsement from
India that it got from the Chinese.
The last substantive issue relating to the immediate neighbourhood is
that of the so-called New Silk Road strategy for South and Central
Asia. The Russians have their own approach to the region, and they are
themselves keen to develop ties between the two regions. They call it
CASA, and are keen to begin by selling surplus electricity from
Tajikistan to Pakistan. They have a quadrilateral of their own –
themselves, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Tajikistan – which has been
pushing this project for several years now. It was under this rubric
that President Putin was to visit Pakistan earlier in October last year.
These transport and other linkages have been much in contention ever
since the break-up of the Soviet Union, and are invested with heavy
geo-strategic significance. Both India and Russia will need to tread
carefully, and be willing to engage each other in an open and honest
dialogue to remove any potential for misunderstanding in any of these
projects.
There is also the emerging situation in the Asia-Pacific Region.
America and some of the other key members in the region have been
promoting the idea of a Concert of Democracies to stabilise future
developments in the area. Much of this is driven by concerns over how
China will evolve as it grows both economically and militarily. Here,
Russia is not considered a major actor by any of the other leading
actors; neither is it a potential partner, nor is it seen as being in
the Chinese camp. However, India is very much in the reckoning of almost
all the drivers of such a policy.
However, we need to recognise that Russia sees China – at least in
the short term – as an important partner in the difficulties it is
facing with the West in general and America in particular. It will
therefore not be sympathetic to any combined effort that will have China
as its objective. Equally, if it has serious frictions with any country
in the region, it is Japan; and Japan is obviously an essential
component of any strategy involving the democracies of the region.
All of this argues for an open and candid dialogue with Russia, so
that each side understands the other’s concerns, and red lines. This has
not been happening so far, and the truth is that where we are willing
for a substantive conversation, they are not; China is an example. On
the contrary, where they seek a frank dialogue, we tend to hold back;
Afghanistan is an illustration. And yet, it is the interests of both
sides to keep up a regular conversation. Both India and Russia face the
problem of isolation; we have a tradition of friendship and trust that
few other major powers have, and it needs to be maintained and nurtured.
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