US to offer India $500 mn in military aid to reduce Russia dependence: Report

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The US is preparing a military aid package for India to deepen security ties and reduce the country’s dependence on Russian weapons, people familiar with the matter said.

The package under consideration would include foreign military financing of as much as $500 million dollars, according to one person, which would make India one of the largest recipients of such aid behind Israel and Egypt. It’s unclear when the deal would be announced, or what weapons would be included.

The effort is part of a much larger initiative by President Joe Biden’s administration to court India as a long-term security partner, despite its reluctance to criticize Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, according to a senior US official who asked not to be named.

Washington wants to be seen as a reliable partner for India across the board, the official added, and the administration is working with other nations including France to make sure Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has the equipment it needs. While India is already diversifying its military platforms away from Russia, the US wants to help make that happen faster, the official said.

The major challenge remains how to provide India major platforms like fighter jets, naval ships and battle tanks, the official said, adding that the administration is looking for a breakthrough in one of these areas. The financing package being discussed would do little to make those types of systems -- which can cost billions or tens of billions of dollars -- more affordable, but it would be a significant symbolic sign of support.

India’s Foreign Ministry didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Officials at the State Department and US embassy in New Delhi didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

India is the world’s largest buyer of Russian weapons, although it has scaled back that relationship of late. Over the past decade, India has bought more than $4 billion worth of military equipment from the US and more than $25 billion from Russia, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

India’s dependence on Russia for weapons against neighbors China and Pakistan is a big reason Modi’s government has avoided criticizing Russian President Vladimir Putin over the war in Ukraine. As the US, Europe, Australia and Japan piled economic sanctions on Russia, India has held off and instead continued imports of discounted Russian oil.

While the US and its allies were initially frustrated with India, they have sought to woo Modi’s government as a key security partner -- including against China in the Indo-Pacific region. Modi is set to join a summit with Biden next week in South Korea that also includes Quad members Japan and Australia, and the Indian leader also received an invitation to join the Group of Seven leaders in Germany next month.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin made the point about China when he spoke at a news conference in April with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Indian Defense Minster Rajnath Singh and Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.

“We’re doing all this because the United States supports India as a defense industry leader in the Indo-Pacific and a net provider of security in the region,” Austin said. “And we all understand the challenges that we face there. The People’s Republic of China is seeking to refashion the region and the international system more broadly in ways that serve its interests.”

Links between the US and India have steadily deepened over the past two decades, with the two sides reaching agreements that allow for more interoperability between their military platforms.

Backing for India is a rare point of bipartisan unity in Washington, and the Biden administration has signaled that it isn’t interested in sanctioning New Delhi over its recent decision to buy the S-400 missile defense system from Russia. Turkey’s purchase of the same system deeply damaged US ties with the NATO ally.

Still, it remains to be seen how far India will go in accepting US military assistance. Russia has historically supplied the majority of India’s military hardware, including fighter jets and missiles, as well as almost all its tanks and helicopters. Modi’s government has told the US the alternatives to moving away completely from Russian weapons imports are too expensive, according to people familiar with the situation, who asked not to be identified because they are not authorized to speak with the media.

mithikx on May 18th, 2022 at 20:57 UTC »

500m is probably not much to India's military expenditures. It's probably more of an invitation to procure western military equipment should they desire to do so.

They're in a weird place as it were I believe, on the one hand they have the second largest population of any country, and on the other they have strained relations with China and Pakistan. India has to deter aggression from their neighbors as well as provide the needs of their some 1.33 billion population which includes food, fuel and electricity.

I can't say I fully understand the proverbial tightrope India is presently walking but even if India can ween itself off some Russian goods, they'll still be dependent in other sectors no matter their course of action. Say they do swear off Russian military equipment and buy from the west, it risks Russia cutting off or otherwise reducing food and fuel exports to India; Russia does have the propensity to cut off the nose to spite the face. It isn't like the west can cover those resource needs at a fly, even if one were to ballpark it, that would still be covering for the resources for tens of millions if not hundreds of millions of people.

There's no way I can envision India siding one way or the other unless they've managed to source alternative means to getting their country's vital necessities much in the same way it's been hard for European nation to cutoff Russian gas.

India has always been NAM (Non-Alligned Movement), while some of their recent decisions or indecisions may be viewed by us as morally questionable or wrong realistically they don't have a choice I think. A large number of their population is impoverished and even those who are okay are living below the standards of even the poorest EU member states. I believe their lower standard of living combined with ongoing external threats and such a staggeringly high population makes the situation in India far harder to compare with those of the western nations.

Manor-Estate on May 18th, 2022 at 19:08 UTC »

Okay but why are Rafales in the picture?

brianlefevre87 on May 18th, 2022 at 18:04 UTC »

If Russia loses it's export customers it will find it much harder to rebuild it's military with modern equipment. It will have to re arm with the same late cold war kit that got destroyed in Ukraine.