All in the hug: After embracing Putin, India’s Modi visits Kyiv

Six weeks after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi of acting against peace, the two men met in the Ukrainian capital

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) greets Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the entrance of the Mariinskyi Palace, in Kyiv, on August 23, 2024.
AFP
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) greets Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the entrance of the Mariinskyi Palace, in Kyiv, on August 23, 2024.

All in the hug: After embracing Putin, India’s Modi visits Kyiv

It was with a warm embrace and a big smile that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi warmly greeted Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Novo-Ogaryovo presidential residence outside Moscow on 9 July 2024.

It so enraged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky that he accused the leader of the world’s largest democracy of dealing “a devastating blow to peace efforts” for ending Russia’s war against Ukraine.

These days, Russia is being supported by allies including North Korea and Iran, while Ukraine is being supported by the US and Europe. Reactions to Modi’s Moscow visit were therefore reminiscent of the Cold War mentality.

India-Russia relations

The US and its allies have been assiduously wooing India in recent years for economic, political and geostrategic reasons. A Russia-China power axis is a major concern to the West, yet Russia is an historic ally of India’s.

While the West knows that it cannot tempt New Delhi to abandon Moscow, it can work to reduce the benefits accruing to Russia and India from their relations.

That will not be easy, not least owing to the volume of bilateral trade, with relations deeply rooted in defence ties and cooperation in the hydrocarbon and nuclear sectors. Recently, India has been buying more Russian oil than China, a major reason why Russia-India trade grew by 66% in 2023.

Ludovic Marin / AFP
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi (R) greets Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the G20 Summit in New Delhi on September 9, 2023.

India is still a heavy user of Russian military equipment despite slowly buying more from Western manufacturers, while farm products and fertilisers are also among India’s other major imports from Russia.

India-West relations

India knows that it cannot ignore the West either. In finance, technology, defense and education, India would do well to maintain good relations with the West.

If India has a much-heralded “special and privileged strategic partnership” with Russia, it must offer something to the West in compensation. Over Ukraine, India has sought to act with neutrality, to balance its relations with both Russia and Ukraine.

Modi's embrace of Putin so enraged Zelensky that he accused the Indian prime minister of dealing "a devastating blow to peace efforts"

In truth, India's relations tilt heavily in favour of Russia. This is not because Hindu nationalists are in power in New Delhi, or Modi is prime minister. India did not cause the Ukraine conflict and is under no obligation to toe the Western line.

Its relationship with Russia is likely to stay strong, not least because it enjoys general support from the Indian public, as well as from circles of influence.

Roberto Schmidt / AFP
Supporters of Ukraine in front of a giant flag as they celebrate Ukrainian independence in front of the White House on August 24, 2024.

In the United States, there is a strong element of right-wing ethno-nationalist political ideology (Hindutva) that defines the cultural identity of India in terms of Hinduism and desires to make India an overtly Hindu nation-state. This segment is vocal against Russia, but the criticism lacks sincerity.

US and Western officials have raised their concerns about Modi meeting Putin, expressing their anger and frustration at the Indian leader, on whom the Russian president conferred the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle, Russia's highest honour.

India-Ukraine relations

From India's point of view, the Western reaction is unjustifiable, but it nevertheless led to Modi becoming the first Indian prime minister to visit Ukraine on 23 August. Modi also hugged Zelensky as they met. Was it warm enough? Ask Zelensky.

Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar sought to play down the hug, telling the media that Modi's embrace of Putin was a South Asian cultural gesture.

Sergey Bobok / AFP
A Ukrainian woman walks through the site of a Russian missile strike in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, on August 25, 2024.

In careful words, Modi criticised the Ukraine war during his talks with Putin and urged dialogue, saying: "Solutions are not possible on the battleground. Amidst guns, bullets and bombs, peace talks cannot be successful. We have to find the path to peace only through talks."

In Ukraine visit, he continued to articulate India's position for a peaceful settlement. It seems pointless. Neither Russia nor Ukraine want to talk, and India and others know that they cannot offer solutions acceptable to the warring parties.

Modi invited Zelensky to visit India after travelling to Kyiv from Poland, a NATO member playing a crucial role in the West's support for Ukraine. Modi and Polish President Andrzej Sebastian Duda hailed an upgrade in their relations to 'strategic partnership'.

Friends with everyone

Ever since Russia invaded Ukraine 2.5 years ago, Ukraine has tried to gain Indian support. India hosted the G20 summit in September last year. During her April 2023 visit to New Delhi, Ukraine's deputy foreign minister Emine Dzhaparova tried to woo India to her country's cause and push for Zelensky's invitation.

Neither Russia nor Ukraine want to talk, and India and others know that they cannot offer solutions acceptable to the warring parties

The Indians politely refused because Ukraine is not a G20 member. Still, fearing Western pressure, Putin skipped the summit, as did Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Marco Longari / AFP
Narendra Modi (seated, far right) listens to Russia's Vladimir Putin at the BRICS conference in Johannesburg in August 2023.

The joint statement issued after Modi visited Kyiv to speak to Zelensky talked up bilateral relations in key business sectors and in culture, creating opportunities for regular senior-level interactions.

They agreed "to explore the possibility of involvement of Indian companies in Ukraine's reconstruction and recovery, in a suitable manner". Before the war finishes, there may yet be more reconstruction needed.

They even suggested cooperation in defence, including "joint collaborations and partnerships for manufacturing in India and cooperation in emerging areas". Perhaps a friendlier period in India-Ukraine relations is emerging. Or perhaps not.

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