India-Russia Sign Military Logistics Pact Enabling Troop Deployments
Auf einen Blick
- India and Russia signed the Reciprocal Exchange of Logistics Agreement (RELOS) in February 2025, enabling two-way access to airbases and ports for military exercises, training and humanitarian missions.
- The pact, ratified in December and effective since January, allows up to five warships, 10 aircraft and 3,000 troops to be simultaneously stationed in the partner country for five years, extendable to 10 years.
- It is expected to strengthen cooperation in servicing India's Russian-origin military equipment and could extend India's strategic reach to the Arctic region.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
India has long-standing defense ties with Russia, relying heavily on Russian-origin military equipment. The RELOS agreement addresses a gap in India's military logistics agreements, as India already has similar pacts with several Western countries but not with Russia, its traditional defense partner.
India and Russia signed the Reciprocal Exchange of Logistics Agreement (RELOS) covering military exercises, training and humanitarian missions in Moscow in February last year, which came into force in January. It enables two-way access to airbases and ports, to support ships, aircraft and personnel. Speaking at the State Duma in Moscow after RELOS' ratification in December, First Deputy Chairman of the International Affairs Committee Vyacheslav Nikonov said "five warships, 10 aircraft and 3,000 troops" could be simultaneously stationed in the partner country's territory for five years under the pact, which could be extended for another five years, according to Russia's official legal information portal on April 17. The agreement is expected to strengthen long-term military cooperation, particularly in servicing India's Russian-origin military equipment and longer overseas deployments, according to Indian media reports. It could extend India's strategic reach to the Arctic region, where powers including Russia and China are seeking to expand their presence. Nandan Unnikrishnan, a distinguished fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, said it was an "anomaly" that India had such military agreements with some Western countries but not with Russia, its long-standing partner in the defence sector.
Offene Fragen
- How will this agreement affect India's existing defense relationships with Western countries?
- What specific Arctic missions are being considered?
- How will the agreement be implemented practically for equipment servicing?





