• Thu. Sep 19th, 2024

    As India’s Russian oil imports rise, US envoy says it’s a sovereign decision

    India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi (R) greets Russian President Vladimir Putin before a meeting at Hyderabad House in New Delhi on December 6, 2021. (Photo by Money SHARMA / AFP)

    With India continuing to import oil from Russia at discounted rates amid the war in Ukraine, the US envoy in New Delhi said Friday that while the goal of Washington’s policy is to reduce revenues to Russia to fund its war, it is a “sovereign decision” of countries to make.

    In her first media interaction since she arrived last month, Elizabeth Jones, the charge d’affaires of the US embassy in New Delhi, said, “On the oil cap, the goal of the policy is to reduce revenues to Russia that could be used to enhance its capacities for continuing to wage war in Ukraine. That’s the goal. And it seems to us that it’s appropriate for countries to take that into account, in terms of the oil purchases they make, but that’s something that’s a sovereign decision and has to be a sovereign decision.”

    India has always defended its rationale to purchase crude from Russia, saying it is buying oil to meet the energy demands of its citizens and to cushion the inflationary impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on its people.

    On the Ukraine war, Jones, who is a career diplomat, said while the US and India agree on issues, the policies to achieve them are not similar.

    Responding to a question on divergences on the Ukraine conflict, she said, “One of the things that US and India agree on is that  we both support rules-based international order. We both support (it) and we are very pleased to say how much India has provided in terms of humanitarian assistance to the Ukrainian people during this period in which the Russians have engaged in this brutal attack.

    “One of the hallmarks of the relationship we enjoy is that we are able to have discussions about issues on which we fundamentally agree, but in which the policies to get there aren’t necessarily always the same,” said Jones who worked on NATO’s role in Europe vis-a-vis Russia as the US Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasia.

    Asked about Beijing’s objections to the US-India defence exercises near the India-China border, she said, “I think I would point you to the kinds of statements that we have heard from our Indian colleagues, to the effect that it’s really none of their business. I will just leave it there.”

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