Putin arrives in India on first visit since Russian invasion of Ukraine

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi receives Russian President Vladimir Putin at the airport in New Delhi on Dec. 4, 2025. (Prime Minister’s Office of India)
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Updated 04 December 2025
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Putin arrives in India on first visit since Russian invasion of Ukraine

  • Russian president joined by defense minister, executives of state companies 
  • New Delhi, Moscow targeting increase in bilateral trade to $100b by 2030

NEW DELHI: Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in New Delhi on Thursday to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi, marking his first visit to India since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago.

Putin’s two-day visit comes as India and Russia mark 25 years of strategic partnership. Putin and Modi on Friday will co-chair the 23rd India-Russia Annual Summit — the strategic partnership’s key platform.

The trip takes place amid intensifying US pressure on Russia to end the war in Ukraine, and tense relations between Washington and New Delhi as the US imposes tariffs on India and threatens sanctions over its historic ties with Moscow and its imports of Russian oil.

“India’s ties with the US have gone through a turbulent phase in recent years under the Trump administration, and Russia had been one of the factors,” Prof. Harsh V. Pant, vice president of the Observer Research Foundation, told Arab News.

“Putin had not visited India for the last four years, so he’s coming after a long time, and he’s also coming at a time when negotiations are going on to end the conflict in Ukraine. So the message, I think — from both Russia and India — to the West and to the world at large, is that they want to build this partnership. And I think it is a way to emphasize how this partnership, which has always been time-tested, is also ready to adapt itself to the new realities.”

Russia is India’s largest defense supplier, accounting for an estimated 36 percent of arms imports and more than half of India’s military hardware.

While defense is expected to be one of the main issues during the Putin-Modi talks, there will be efforts to expand relations in other sectors, especially trade.

“Intensifying the trade and economic relations has been identified as a priority area by both the leaders, who had set the targets of increasing bilateral investment to $50 billion (by 2025) and bilateral trade to $100 billion (by 2030),” the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement ahead of Putin’s visit.

According to government data, bilateral trade has been on the rise over the past two years, reaching $68.7 billion in 2024-25, dominated by Indian imports of Russian goods — particularly crude oil and petroleum products.

“I think both sides also know that they need to move this relationship beyond defense because it has been too defense-centric, and taking it beyond defense allows for a certain broadening of this relationship that is much required at this point,” Pant said.

“And there is also an aspect of labor mobility that is being talked about: that Russia is keen to get Indian professionals, Indian workers in Russia. So that might also be on the table.”

The Kremlin has said that Putin’s visit to India was “providing an opportunity to comprehensively discuss the extensive agenda of Russian-Indian relations as a particularly privileged strategic partnership.”

Putin is being joined on the trip by Andrei Belousov, his defense minister, and a delegation of top executives from Russian state arms and oil companies.

“There is a lot that the two countries want to do,” Pant said. “They would want to redefine the contours of this relationship based on the challenges of geopolitics of the day today.”


Pandas and ping-pong: Macron ending China visit on lighter note

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Pandas and ping-pong: Macron ending China visit on lighter note

CHENGDU: An ancient dam, pandas and ping-pong: French leader Emmanuel Macron concluded his fourth state visit to China on Friday in the southwestern city of Chengdu, striking a more relaxed note after tough discussions on Ukraine and trade with his counterpart Xi Jinping a day earlier.
Far from the imposing Great Hall of the People in Beijing where the two leaders held talks, Xi and First Lady Peng Liyuan showed Macron and his wife Brigitte around the centuries-old Dujiangyan Dam, a World Heritage Site set against the mountainous landscape of Sichuan province.
Macron, who was earlier filmed going for a morning jog near a lake alongside his security detail, was told through an interpreter about the ancient irrigation system, which dates back to the third century BC and continues to provide water to the Sichuan Basin plain.
The French president said he was “very touched” by the gesture, a departure from official protocol. He had previously hosted Xi in the Pyrenees — where he had spent time as a child — in May 2024.
Macron said the trip was a sign of mutual trust and a desire to “act together” at a time when international tensions are rising and trade imbalances are widening to China’s advantage.
The two presidential couples will part ways after a lunch, with the Macrons continuing the trip independently.

- Panda diplomacy -

Macron is meeting with students in Chengdu, China’s fourth-largest city with 21 million inhabitants that is considered one of the most culturally and socially open in China.
Brigitte Macron, meanwhile, will visit the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, where two 17-year-old pandas, loaned to France in 2012 as part of China’s “panda diplomacy,” have just returned.
There, she will meet Yuan Meng, the first giant panda born in France in 2017, to whom she is “Godmother,” and who arrived in China in 2023.
The forests of Sichuan are home to numerous protected species, from snow leopards to giant pandas.
Through loans to zoos, China has made these bears emblematic ambassadors of its friendship with peoples from Japan to Germany.
Cubs born abroad are sent a few years later to Chengdu to participate in breeding and rehabilitation programs in the wild.
For his part, the French president will meet table tennis brothers Alexis and Felix Lebrun, stars of the 2024 Paris Olympics, who are in China for the Mixed Team Table Tennis World Cup.

- Tentative Signals -

On Thursday in Beijing, the French president urged his Chinese counterpart to work toward ending the war in Ukraine and to correct the trade imbalances with France and Europe.
China regularly calls for peace talks and respect for the territorial integrity of all countries, but has never condemned Russia for its 2022 invasion.
Western governments accuse Beijing of providing Russia with crucial economic support for its war effort, notably by supplying it with military components for its defense industry, something Beijing denies.
Emmanuel Macron’s call for increased Chinese investment in France appears to have been heeded.
A letter of intent to this effect was signed on Thursday, with Xi Jinping stating his readiness to “increase reciprocal investments” for a “fair trading environment.”