Kremlin confirmed on Tuesday that Moscow and Delhi will
sign S-400 missile deal when Russian President Vladimir Putin visits
India later this week despite US sanctions against countries buying arms
from Russia.
Putin will oversee the signing of a
deal worth more than five billion US dollars, which Moscow has been
negotiating with India for months, said Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov ahead
of Putin's visit.
What is S-400 missile system?
According
to Al Jazeera, the S-400 missile system is a state-of-the-art weapons
platform with a maximum range of 400 kilometers, which is considered one
of the best defense systems in existence.India had entered into an inter-governmental purchase agreement of the S-400 missile system with Russia as early as 2016.
For US, the purchase will violate the Countering
America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) instituted by the
US Congress on arms purchases from Russia.
Recently,
while responding to a question on the possibility of sanctions on India,
Alice Wells, principal deputy assistant secretary for South and Central
Asia in the US Department of State said that the current American
sanctions are not intended to adversely impact countries like India.
Why India is eyeing Russia's S-400?
According
to the officials, while Russian hardware may not be top of the line as
compared to the US platforms in terms of technology, it is much cheaper
initially and comes without additional conditionalities on the buyer.
This seems to be a good deal for India where more than
60 percent of the military equipment including fighters, tanks, missiles
come from Russia.
Without the spares, the Indian
armed forces' fighting capability will be significantly emasculated,
local newspaper Hindustan Times reported.
It would be tough for India to stand the consequences if
Russia decides to directly sell the system to Pakistan as it may skew
the military balance in the region.
Pankaj Saran,
Indian ambassador to Russia earlier said that the expansion of ties and
partnership with Russia were an integral part of India's Indo-Pacific
policy.
For Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who
has personally invested a lot in building close ties with Putin,
deferring or shelving the deal will sour their relationship, the
newspaper analyzed.
What concerned US most?
The
deterioration of Russia-US ties and India's expanding acquisition of US
defense technologies have made US more concerned about India's
purchases of Russian weapons, noted Richard Weitz, director of the
Center for Political-Military Analysis at the Hudson Institute.
"Current US concerns revolve around India's purchase of the S-400s," he added.
In the eyes of some of the US officials, India's large
military purchase "would shape India's strategic relations over the next
generation and impact interoperability and the ability to continue to
deepen its partnership with US and others."
As Weitz
mentioned that US experts are concerned about Russia gaining access to
the advanced US defense technologies that India is acquiring whose
activities could be monitored by the Russians and that knowledge
transferred to their own capabilities and combat approaches.
War of words
On
Wednesday, the US ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison
warned Russia that if it does not halt the development of a new cruise
missile in violation of a treaty between the countries, the US will
"take out" the missile.
The US insists, despite
Russian denials, that Moscow has a new medium-range missile in its
inventory – the Novator 9M729 capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
NATO fears that the Novator 9M729 system contravenes the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) agreement of 1987.
The
Cold War-era pact bans a whole category of weapons: Ground-launched
medium-range missiles, capable of striking targets at distances between
500 and 5,500 kilometers (310-3,100 miles).
Hutchison
said that if the system "became capable of delivering" then the US
"would then be looking at the capability to take out a missile that
could hit any of our countries in Europe and hit America."
In response to the US statement, Moscow said the comments on possible destruction of Russian warheads are dangerous.
"It
seems that people who make such statements do not realize the level of
their responsibility and the danger of aggressive rhetoric," TASS news
agency quoted Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.
cgtn
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