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Foreign Policy Watch: India-China

What Russia-China ties mean for India’s security

Why in the News?

Russian President Vladimir Putin visited China in May 2026 for his first foreign trip after re-election, showing China’s growing importance to Russia. The visit is significant because 32% of Russia’s trade in 2025 was with China, reflecting Moscow’s increasing dependence after Western sanctions. Russia-China ties have expanded from cautious cooperation to deeper links in energy, trade, technology, and defence. For India, this matters because Russia is a key defence partner, while China remains India’s biggest security challenge.

How Have Russia-China Relations Evolved Historically?

  1. Imperial Legacy: Rivalry and Territorial Disputes (17th Century-1917): Russia and China experienced phases of rivalry during the imperial period, including territorial disputes and unequal treaties.
    1. Expansionist Competition: Initial contacts between the Russian and Qing Empires in the 17th century involved competition over Siberia and the Amur River regions.
    2. “Unequal Treaties”: In the 19th century, Russia exploited China’s weakness to annex large tracts of territory, including the regions surrounding the Amur and Ussuri Rivers, through treaties such as the Treaty of Aigun (1858) and the Treaty of Peking (1860).
    3. Historical Distrust: This era established a legacy of mistrust, as these treaties are still viewed in China as part of a “Century of Humiliation”.
  2. Communist Cooperation:
    1. The “Honeymoon Decade”: Following the 1949 communist victory in China, the Soviet Union and China formed a tight ideological alliance, strengthened by the 1950 Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship.
  3. Sino-Soviet Split:
    1. Ideological Divergence: Disputes emerged in the late 1950s over interpretations of Marxism-Leninism, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev’s “peaceful coexistence” policy, and China’s desire for nuclear ambitions.
    2. Border Conflicts: Relations broke down entirely in the 1960s, leading to border conflicts, notably the 1969 Ussuri River clashes.
    3. “Confrontation Decade”: Through the 1970s and 1980s, the nations maintained a high-tension relationship, with China moving toward rapprochement with the US to counter Soviet power.
  4. Strategic Reconciliation: Relations improved after the Soviet collapse in 1991, especially after Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s 1992 visit to China.
  5. Putin-Xi Consolidation: A “No Limits” Partnership (2022-2026): Russia-China ties deepened significantly after 2022 following the Ukraine war and Western sanctions on Moscow.
    1. Strategic Alignment: Relations deepened significantly following the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, as Beijing provided an economic lifeline to a sanctioned Moscow.
    2. “No Limits” Friendship: Weeks before the 2022 Ukraine war, Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping declared a partnership with “no limits,” uniting against the U.S.-led global hegemony.
    3. Asymmetric Partnership (2026): By 2026, Russia has become increasingly dependent on China, which is now its largest trading partner, purchasing large amounts of oil and supplying high-tech components, despite Western sanctions.
    4. The 2026 Configuration: Current relations (as of May 2026) are described as a “comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination for a new era,” with leaders meeting regularly to sign new cooperation agreements on trade, energy, and technology.

Why Are Russia and China Moving Closer Strategically?

  1. Western Pressure: Shared resistance to US-led sanctions, military alliances, and perceived hegemonic interventions has encouraged coordination.
  2. Economic Complementarity: China provides markets, finance, technology, and industrial capacity, while Russia supplies energy, defence systems, and natural resources.
  3. Political Alignment: Both states support a “multipolar world order” and oppose unilateral dominance in global institutions.
  4. Diplomatic Coordination: Cooperation has increased in multilateral forums such as BRICS, Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), and the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).
  5. Strategic Necessity: Russia’s post-Ukraine isolation has accelerated dependence on China for trade, investment, and diplomatic legitimacy.

How Deep Is the Russia-China Economic Partnership?

  1. Trade Expansion: China accounted for 32% of Russia’s total trade in 2025, highlighting growing economic dependence.
  2. Energy Cooperation: Russia supplies oil and gas to China through major pipelines, reducing Moscow’s dependence on European markets.
  3. Power of Siberia Pipeline: The 3,000-km pipeline transports natural gas from Eastern Siberia directly to northeastern China’s Heilongjiang province.
  4. Power of Siberia-2 Project: The proposed 2,600-km pipeline through Mongolia could significantly expand Russian gas exports to China.
  5. Technology and Finance: China increasingly supports Russia through alternative payment systems, industrial collaboration, and trade settlements outside the dollar system.
  6. Sanctions Adaptation: Bilateral trade has become a mechanism for reducing Western economic pressure on Russia.

Are Russia and China Moving Towards a Military Alliance?

  1. Strategic Coordination: Joint military exercises, defence consultations, and strategic patrols have expanded, indicating growing military cooperation.
    1. Example: “Vostok” exercises, Joint Sea naval drills in the Sea of Japan, and joint bomber patrols over the East China Sea and Pacific region.
  2. “Better Than Allies” Approach: Russia and China describe their relationship as “not allies, but better than allies”, enabling deep cooperation without a binding defence commitment. This preserves strategic flexibility and prevents subordination of national interests.
  3. Strategic Convergence: Cooperation in missile warning systems, aerospace, cyber capabilities, artificial intelligence, and dual-use technologies reflects increasing security alignment.
    1. Example: Russia assisted China in developing an early-warning missile defence system, while China increasingly supports Russia through microchips and drone components after Western sanctions.
  4. Geopolitical Signalling: Joint military activities are often aimed at strategic messaging rather than interoperability, signalling resistance to Western influence.
    1. Example: Russia-China-Iran trilateral naval exercises in the Gulf of Oman project coordination near critical maritime chokepoints.
  5. Absence of Formal Treaty: Russia and China have avoided a NATO-style mutual defence alliance, indicating limits to military integration despite growing convergence.
  6. Entrapment Concerns: Beijing may avoid direct involvement in Russia-NATO conflict over Ukraine. At the same time, Moscow remains cautious about being drawn into a Taiwan contingency, reducing prospects for a formal alliance.
  7. Asymmetric Dependence: China’s larger economic weight makes it the senior partner, while Russia increasingly depends on Beijing for trade, technology, and diplomatic support, creating structural limits to equal alliance formation.
  8. Assessment: Russia and China are moving toward a strategic or quasi-alliance characterised by deep coordination, but not a formal military alliance, due to fears of entrapment and differing regional priorities.

How Does a Stronger Russia-China Axis Affect India’s Security?

  1. Strategic Dilemma:
    1. The Continental Catch-22: India relies heavily on Russia to maintain its military readiness, yet its primary active threat is China along the 3,488-kilometer Line of Actual Control (LAC).
  2. Continental Security Challenge: Closer Moscow-Beijing ties may weaken Russia’s ability to remain strategically neutral in India-China tensions.
    1. Eroded Diplomatic Buffer: Historically, during India-China border crises (such as the 1962 war or the 2020 Galwan Valley clash), Moscow acted as a quiet mediator or accelerated emergency arms supplies to New Delhi.
    2. The Tri-Continental Encirclement: A tight Russia-China axis, combined with Pakistan’s deep alignment with Beijing, effectively creates a coordinated security ring around India’s northern and western land borders.
  3. Defence Dependence: India continues to depend heavily on Russian-origin defence platforms including missiles, submarines, and fighter systems.
    1. Legacy Systems Lock-In: Over 60% of India’s current military inventory, including the S-400 Triumf air defense missile systems, Sukhoi Su-30MKI fighter jets, T-90 tanks, and INS Chakra nuclear submarine programs, is of Russian origin.
    2. The Spare-Parts Crisis: India cannot instantly replace these platforms. It requires a decades-long supply of Russian spare parts, technical upgrades, and ammunition to maintain basic operational readiness against Pakistan and China.
  4. Reduced Strategic Space: Enclosure in Eurasian Geopolitics
    1. Multilateral Dilution: India uses groupings like BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) to project power in Eurasia. However, a dominant Russia-China axis turns these forums into anti-Western vehicles, alienating India’s interests.
    2. Losing Central Asia: India views Central Asia as vital for energy security and counter-terrorism. A unified Russia-China front effectively locks India out of the region. This will allow China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to expand unchecked.
  5. Technology Access: Russia’s increasing technological integration with China may influence defence transfers and strategic cooperation with India.
    1. Joint Technology Leakage: As Russia and China merge their military-industrial complexes in areas like artificial intelligence, hypersonic missiles, and cyber warfare, India faces the acute risk of data spillover.
  6. Diplomatic Balancing: The Aggressive Pivot to the West:
    1. The Western Counterweight: To offset its continental vulnerabilities, India is rapidly intensifying its security architecture with the West, notably through the Quad (US, Japan, Australia) and bilateral defense pacts with France and the US.

Can India Preserve Strategic Autonomy Amid Emerging Geopolitical Blocs?

  1. Multi-Alignment: India increasingly follows a strategy of engaging multiple power centres rather than exclusive alliances.
  2. Strategic Autonomy: Maintains independent foreign policy choices despite closer engagement with Western powers.
  3. Russia Engagement: Sustains defence and energy ties with Moscow despite Western pressure.
  4. China Management: Combines military preparedness, diplomatic engagement, and economic caution.
  5. Indo-Pacific Balancing: Strengthens partnerships through the Quad, maritime cooperation, and supply-chain diversification.
  6. Domestic Capability: Expands defence indigenisation through Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence to reduce long-term dependence.

Conclusion

The deepening Russia-China partnership reflects a shifting global order shaped by geopolitical rivalry, economic interdependence, and resistance to Western dominance. Although a formal military alliance remains unlikely, growing strategic convergence between Moscow and Beijing could narrow India’s diplomatic and security space. For India, the challenge lies in preserving strategic autonomy through calibrated multi-alignment. Maintaining strong ties with Russia, managing tensions with China, and strengthening partnerships in the Indo-Pacific while accelerating defence indigenisation and economic resilience is the need of the hour for India.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2020] What is the significance of Indo-US defence deals over Indo-Russian defence deals? Discuss with reference to stability in the Indo-Pacific region.

Linkage: The PYQ directly relates to India’s strategic balancing between traditional defence dependence on Russia and emerging partnerships with the US amid geopolitical shifts. The deepening Russia-China partnership increases India’s security concerns, making defence diversification and Indo-Pacific strategy more relevant.


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