Indeed, in New Delhi,  reports suggest that two Air India flights were nearby when MH17  crashed; one of them, Air India One, was carrying Prime Minister  Narendra Modi from Frankfurt back to the Indian capital.
Indian officials have  been quick to offer their condolences to the families of the deceased.  As a growing number of world leaders accuse Moscow of creating  Frankenstein's monster, of giving Ukraine's pro-Russia rebels the heavy  artillery that brought down MH17, New Delhi is so far remaining on the  fence.
In its ugliest hour,  facing the likelihood of unprecedented sanctions, authoritarian Russia  can count on at least one powerful ally: India, the world's largest  democracy.
Russia and India, bedfellows? Sound surprising?
It shouldn't.
Just last week, before  the MH17 disaster, at a BRICS summit in Brazil, Modi expressed his  country's deep affection for Russia. "Even a child in India, if asked to  say who is India's best friend, will reply it is Russia," declared the  Indian Prime Minister.
Or consider how, at a  speech in Moscow last year, then-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said  these words: "Russia has stood by India at moments of great  international challenge, when our own resources were limited and our  friends were few. ... Indians will never forget."
Both Modi and Singh were  pointing to decades of steady relations, starting with India's  independence in 1947 and its brush with socialism in the 1950s, through  the Cold War years and the breakup of the Soviet Union, up to the  present moment, with the two nations in the middle of joint naval drills  in the Sea of Japan.
The special friendship  has disappointed a number of India's other allies. Washington has been  frustrated by New Delhi's silence on Russia's annexation of Crimea.  Ukraine is even more upset. In an interview with the newspaper The  Hindu, Ukraine's ambassador to New Delhi said it especially behooved  India to "make a more clear statement on supporting Ukraine's  sovereignty and territorial integrity," given its aspirations to be a  U.N. Security Council member.






 
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