HomeNewsOpinionRussia-Ukraine Conflict | India thwarts Western attempts to drive a wedge between New Delhi and Moscow

Russia-Ukraine Conflict | India thwarts Western attempts to drive a wedge between New Delhi and Moscow

Notwithstanding Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s peace offer to the belligerents in the escalating war, India is unlikely to rush into any mammoth effort to bring Moscow and Kyiv to the negotiating table

October 07, 2022 / 12:40 IST
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PM Narendra Modi. (Image: AFP/File)
PM Narendra Modi. (Image: AFP/File)

“Did Macron, Blinken, and Cleverly expect our PM to tell Russia’s President that ‘Yes, the time has come for war?’” Bewilderment writ on his face, a very senior official of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) was referring, in a private conversation, to Emmanuel Macron, the President of France, Antony Blinken, the United States Secretary of State, and James Cleverly, the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary. All of them had praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the nine words he said in public when he met Russian President Vladimir Putin on September 16.

I know that today's era is not of war,” was all Modi said without directly mentioning even once the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Everyone in the behemoth of the Indian government took the cue from Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra, and chose not to explain on record what was on Modi’s mind when he spoke these words to Putin. “I think, it would be very unfair for me to interpret what the two leaders openly said. You all heard them very, very clearly,” was what Kwatra said in Samarkand after Modi’s bilateral meeting with Putin.

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For a change, even politicians, who love the sound of their own voices, chose not to go beyond repeating the Prime Minister’s now-famous nine words.

Naturally, when India abstained on the United Nations Security Council resolution against Russia over a secessionist referendum in four ethnic Russian provinces in Ukraine, there was consternation behind closed doors in Western chancelleries. That vote was two weeks after Modi met Putin. The West had hoped in vain that the Modi government would distance itself from Putin as a follow up to the “era is not of war” remark.