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India’s recent diplomatic choreography during Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit has reaffirmed a simple yet powerful truth — New Delhi’s strategic autonomy is no slogan; it is a governing doctrine. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to break protocol and personally receive Putin on the tarmac was more than symbolic courtesy. It was a calculated assertion that India chooses its partners on the basis of national interest, not geopolitical pressure. The eight-second hug — replayed endlessly across global media — conveyed what official statements often cannot: India is no longer a passive responder to global currents; it is an active shaper of them.

Beyond the optics, the visit carried unmistakable strategic weight. The India–Russia joint statement, covering trade targets, civil nuclear expansion at Kudankulam, cooperation in AI, and emerging Arctic shipping routes, may appear routine on paper but is transformational in its timing. The flurry of reactions from Western capitals — official caution, think-tank anxiety, and social-media noise — only underscored how deeply the visit punctured long-held assumptions. As Sanjay Kumar Verma observed, the quiet confidence displayed in New Delhi was nothing less than a diplomatic “thermonuclear device” detonated in the heart of the West’s sanctions architecture.

For the West, particularly Washington and Brussels, the message is unambiguous. India will not be lectured, pressured, or boxed into ideological corners. If the US seeks India’s partnership in managing China, it must engage on terms of equality — recognising India’s right to maintain defence ties with Russia, shop for energy where it is cheapest, and choose technology collaborators based on capability rather than alignment. Europe faces the same crossroads. Either respect India’s independent choices or risk watching New Delhi deepen its footprint in plurilateral forums where its influence outstrips that of entire blocs. The world has changed; the sooner the West realises this, the better it can work with an India that stands firmly on its own feet.


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