India-Russia’s New Military

Posted on December 3, 2025

On December 2, 2025, the Russian parliament’s lower house, the State Duma, ratified an important defence-logistics agreement with India. This comes just days before Russian President Vladimir Putin is scheduled to visit New Delhi on December 4–5 for the 23rd India-Russia Annual Summit.

The agreement, called the Reciprocal Exchange of Logistic Support (RELOS) Agreement, was initially signed on February 18, 2025. With the recent ratification, it has now become a binding treaty, giving it full legal force. Both the Duma and the Kremlin describe this as a step toward a deeper, strategic partnership between the two countries.

What is RELOS? Key Features

RELOS provides a framework for mutual logistical support between the armed forces of India and Russia. Here’s what it allows:

  • Access to military bases and ports: Military aircraft, ships, and other formations from either country can use the other’s bases, ports, and airspace for refueling, repairs, resupply, or restocking.
  • Smooth coordination for joint operations: India and Russia can more easily conduct joint exercises, training missions, humanitarian assistance, and disaster-relief operations.
  • Port calls and airspace use: Warships and aircraft from both countries can make port calls and use airbases and airspace when agreed upon.

Importantly, RELOS is not about permanent basing. It is a facilities-sharing and logistics-support pact, allowing both militaries to cooperate when both sides agree.

Why This Ratification Matters

  1. Strategic timing before Putin’s visit: By ratifying RELOS just before the summit, Russia signals that defence cooperation remains central to India-Russia ties.
  2. Enhanced flexibility and interoperability: Shared access to facilities allows both militaries to conduct joint drills, humanitarian missions, and disaster responses more efficiently, especially in strategic regions like the Indian Ocean or Arctic.
  3. Deeper defence trust without permanent bases: RELOS strengthens cooperation without requiring permanent bases, offering a practical approach to defence ties.
  4. Broader India-Russia cooperation: The summit is expected to cover defence, energy, civil-nuclear cooperation, trade, and payment mechanisms, highlighting how RELOS fits into a larger strategic partnership.

What it does not do and why that matters

  • RELOS does not automatically mean permanent war-ship bases or long-term stationing of foreign troops on home soil. It’s about mutual logistical access, on a case-by-case, agreed basis.
  • Any joint operation — training, drills, humanitarian aid must still be mutually agreed upon; RELOS only provides the mechanism, not the obligation.
  • It doesn’t automatically alter India’s underlying strategic autonomy: India remains free to choose when, where, and how to exercise this access.

In short this is a tool for flexibility and readiness, not a binding deployment right.

What to watch now

President Putin’s visit on December 4–5 will likely see RELOS being activated through new defence-related discussions. Media reports suggest possible deals on additional air-defence systems (like the S-400 Triumf), advanced fighter jets (such as the Su-57), and expanding civil-nuclear cooperation.

Furthermore, analysts will monitor whether both countries utilize RELOS for joint humanitarian or disaster-relief operations a visible demonstration of its practical utility beyond military symbolism.

In a world of shifting alliances, RELOS represents a low-cost, high-flexibility mechanism for two long-standing partners to deepen trust, enhance readiness, and preserve strategic autonomy with both New Delhi and Moscow signaling they’re ready to turn rhetoric into real cooperation.

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