Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist October 2019 | Page 13
The Journey So Far
Amit Cowshish*
Beginnings of the journey
The foundations of this bond were laid on
April 13, 1947, when India’s Congress-led
interim government and the Soviet Union’s
Communist Party opted to establish offi cial
missions in each other’s capitals.
The serious engagement, however, began in
1955 with the Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru while visiting Moscow in June that year
and the Soviet Communist Party First Secretary
Nikita Khrushchev arriving in New Delhi a few
months later, overcoming the initial misgivings
Moscow harboured about India.
One of the lasting outcomes of Khrushchev’s
visit was the announcement of the Soviet
Union’s support for India’s claim of sovereignty
over the northern province of Kashmir. Sixty-
four years later Russia has displayed the
same consistency in endorsing New Delhi’s
revocation of Kashmir’s special constitutional
status.
In the spirit of ‘principled reciprocity’ that
cemented the bilateral bond between Delhi and
Moscow during the Cold War decades, India
denounced Western colonial attitudes as the root
cause of the 1956 Suez Canal crisis involving
Israel, France and the UK. India also refrained
from criticising the intervention by Russian
troops in the Hungarian uprising in 1955 after
Budapest joined the Moscow-led Warsaw Pact.
Years later, India was to again break ranks with
almost the entire world when it tacitly supported
the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in 1979,
which ultimately led to its collapse in 1991 and
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 10 • October 2019, Noida • 13