Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has told Russian President Vladimir Putin that now is “not a time for war”.
“I know your position on the conflict in Ukraine, your concerns. … We will do our best to end this as soon as possible,” Putin replied.
The exchange took place on Friday on the sidelines of a regional summit in Uzbekistan.
New Delhi and Moscow have longstanding ties dating back to the Cold War, and Russia remains by far India’s biggest arms supplier.
But in their first face-to-face meeting since Russian forces invaded Ukraine in February, Modi told Putin: “Excellency, I know today’s time is not a time for war.”
India has shied away from explicitly condemning Russia for the invasion, which sent the price of oil and other commodities soaring.
But he stressed the importance of “democracy and diplomacy and dialogue” in the meeting on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit in the Uzbek city of Samarkand.
Participants would discuss “how to move forward on the path of peace”, Modi added in a video shown on the Indian public broadcaster Doordarshan.
The SCO summit comes as Russian forces face major battlefield setbacks in Ukraine, and represented an opportunity for Putin to show his country had not been fully isolated despite Western efforts.
While Putin told Modi that he wanted to end the conflict “as soon as possible”, he added that Ukraine’s leadership had rejected negotiations “and stated that it wants to achieve its goals by military means, on the battlefield”.
On Thursday, Putin met with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping and acknowledged that his key ally Beijing also had “concerns” over the conflict.
Balancing act
New Delhi has long walked a tightrope in its relations with the West and Moscow — and the Russian invasion of Ukraine has highlighted the difficulty of that balancing act.
It has urged a cessation of hostilities but repeatedly brushed off calls from Washington to condemn Russia, despite India pursuing greater security ties with the United States.
Unusually, India is a member of both the SCO and the so-called Quad, a strategic bloc grouping it, the United States, Japan and Australia, and aimed at providing a more substantive counterweight to China’s rising military and economic power.
Pankaj Saran, a former Indian ambassador to Russia, described Modi’s comments as “quite frank” in saying that the Ukraine crisis “had caught the attention of the whole world and created problems for the developing world”.
“This was a fairly strong message to Russia,” he told Doordarshan. “As a friend, his recommendation and India’s position is that this needs to be resolved only through dialogue and diplomacy.”
Putin visited New Delhi late last year, bear-hugging Modi and hailing India as a “great power” as the two men bolstered military and energy ties.
India is the world’s second largest importer of arms after Saudi Arabia and according to the Delhi newspaper Business Standard, between 2016 and 2020, 49.4% of its weapons purchases were from Russia.
The Asian giant of 1.4 billion people is also a major consumer of Russian oil, ramping up discounted purchases in the wake of a Western embargo.