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HomeWorldPutin's India visit may focus on RIC troika revival: How Trump's trade war is nudging Delhi closer to Moscow, Beijing

Putin's India visit may focus on RIC troika revival: How Trump's trade war is nudging Delhi closer to Moscow, Beijing

Vladimir Putin's proposed visit comes amid Donald Trump imposing 50 per cent tariffs on Indian imports, citing New Delhi’s continued purchase of Russian oil.

August 07, 2025 / 17:07 IST
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In this handout picture taken and released by Photo host brics-russia2024.ru on October 22, 2024, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russia's President Vladimir Putin and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi attend a concert prior to an informal dinner on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Kazan.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to visit India later this month for a high-stakes meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, at a time when tensions between New Delhi and Washington are escalating over India’s continued trade with Moscow. The proposed visit – confirmed by National Security Adviser Ajit Doval – comes amid US President Donald Trump imposing 50 per cent tariffs on Indian imports, citing New Delhi’s continued purchase of Russian oil.

Against this backdrop, the possible revival of the Russia-India-China (RIC) Troika is expected to be high on the agenda when Modi and Putin meet. The format, once seen as a counterweight to Western blocs, has gained renewed significance as all three nations face mounting pressure from Washington, particularly through economic coercion.

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Adding to the geopolitical churn, Prime Minister Modi is also scheduled to visit China on August 31 to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit, where he may meet Chinese President Xi Jinping — another key member of the RIC triangle. Together, these two visits could signal a broader regional recalibration aimed at insulating Eurasian powers from US-led economic and diplomatic pressures.

In May this year, Moscow had pushed to revive the long-dormant RIC trilateral format, signalling its intent to reposition itself at the heart of Eurasian diplomacy amid growing geopolitical fragmentation, deepening ties with China, and India's strategic hedging between the West and East.