• About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Thursday, June 11, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
No Result
View All Result

Strategic bridge

BRICS is key platform for India-Russia cooperation

by Blitz India Media
May 20, 2026
in Insight
0
BRICS May Redefine India-Russia Strategic Ties

Sukumar Sah

For decades, India-Russia relationship has rested on three pillars: defence cooperation, diplomatic trust and geopolitical convergence. But the world that sustained this partnership has changed dramatically. The Ukraine war, Western sanctions on Moscow, China’s growing dominance and the fragmentation of the global order have all forced New Delhi and Moscow to rethink the carefully- designed structure of their engagement.

In this changing landscape, intergovernmental organisation BRICS may emerge not merely as a symbolic grouping of emerging economies but as the most important strategic platform for future India-Russia cooperation.

BRICS offers both countries something valuable: strategic space without formal alliance obligations

Isolation, uncertainty

The timing is significant. Russia today faces unprecedented isolation from the West. Europe, once Moscow’s principal energy and economic partner, has sharply reduced its dependence on Russian resources. The Kremlin has consequently accelerated its ‘pivot to Asia’.

For India, meanwhile, the global environment has become increasingly uncertain. Relations with China remain tense, the West expects greater strategic alignment from New Delhi, and the world economy is entering an era of trade protectionism and geopolitical fragmentation.
In such a situation, BRICS offers both countries something valuable: strategic space without formal alliance obligations.

Unlike military blocs or ideological coalitions, BRICS functions as a flexible platform where countries with differing political systems and national interests can cooperate on shared economic and geopolitical concerns. This suits India perfectly. New Delhi has consistently resisted joining rigid alliances and has instead championed ‘multi-alignment’ – engaging multiple power centres simultaneously while preserving policy independence.

Legitimacy, relevance

For Russia, BRICS represents something even more critical: legitimacy and relevance beyond the Western sphere. Moscow understands that its future influence will increasingly depend on institutions where the West does not dominate decision-making. In that respect, BRICS provides Russia a seat at a major global table alongside India, China, Brazil, South Africa and newly-inducted members from West Asia and Africa.

The real significance of BRICS, however, lies not in summit declarations but in the gradual creation of alternative economic and financial mechanisms. Discussions on trade settlements in local currencies, expansion of the New Development Bank and reducing dependence on dollar-dominated financial systems directly serve both Indian and Russian interests.

India has already benefited enormously from discounted Russian oil despite sanctions-related payment complications. A stronger BRICS financial framework could help institutionalise such economic resilience.

Yet BRICS is also becoming a subtle arena of strategic competition, especially between India and China. Beijing sees the grouping as a vehicle for expanding Chinese influence across the Global South. India, however, wants BRICS to remain multipolar rather than China-centric. This is where Russia becomes important for New Delhi.

Moscow has traditionally supported India’s presence in multilateral institutions and often acts as a balancing factor within Eurasian geopolitics.

India advantage

Indeed, Russia may increasingly find that India, not China, offers its most stable long-term partnership in Asia. Unlike Beijing, New Delhi does not threaten Russian territory, compete in Central Asia with the same intensity or seek to dominate Moscow strategically. India offers Russia markets, technology cooperation, diplomatic balance and political credibility in the democratic world.

Still, BRICS cannot automatically become the foundation of a renewed India-Russia partnership. The grouping remains structurally weak, internally divided and lacking institutional depth. India’s border tensions with China continue to cast a shadow over BRICS unity. Moreover, New Delhi will remain cautious about any attempt to turn BRICS into an anti-Western bloc.

Related Posts

Why a Taiwan Crisis Threatens the Entire Global Economy
Insight

Taiwan spectre

June 9, 2026
BRICS Summit Exposes India’s Strategic Challenges
Insight

Tehran, Moscow

June 6, 2026
mamata-banerjee
Insight

The wrath of mothers

May 24, 2026
Sworn In as West Bengal CM, BJP Triumphs
Insight

Saffron Bengal

May 24, 2026
Korea-earns
Insight

Korea earns. India

May 9, 2026
Political payday
Insight

Political payday of power & perks

May 6, 2026
Load More
Next Post
ipl

FROM FAVOURITES TO FLOPS

Recent News

Hormuz
News

Another ship with Indian crew comes under US attack

by Blitz India Media
June 11, 2026
0

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI:An incident involving a US attack on a vessel with Indian crew off Oman's Shinas port was...

Read moreDetails
growth

Three Indian cities in world’s top 30 financial markets

June 11, 2026
dolar

Top banks offer 6.6 pc on foreign currency deposits

June 11, 2026
crude oil

West Asia conflict sees surge in crude oil prices

June 11, 2026
financial

Auto ancillary sector revenues triple to Rs 5 lakh cr

June 11, 2026

Blitz Highlights

  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Insight
  • Entertainment
  • Health

International Editions

  • US (New York)
  • UK (London)
  • Middle East (Dubai)
  • Tanzania (Africa)

Nation

  • East
  • West
  • South
  • North
  • Hindi Edition

E-paper

  • India
  • Hindi E-paper
  • Dubai E-Paper
  • USA E-Paper
  • UK-Epaper
  • Tanzania E-paper

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Blitz Highlights
      • Special
      • Spotlight
      • Insight
      • Entertainment
      • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Legal
    • Perspective
    • Nation
      • East
      • West
      • North
      • South
    • Business & Economy
    • World
    • Hindi Edition
    • International Editions
      • Dubai
      • Tanzania
      • United Kingdom
      • USA
    • Blitz India Business

    ©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation