Behind the Beijing smiles with Putin, Modi and Xi

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Behind the Beijing smiles with Putin, Modi and Xi


TIANJIN, CHINA – SEPTEMBER 01: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin(L) and Chinese President Xi jinping ahead of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit 2025 at the Meijiang Convention and Exhibition Centre on September 1, 2025 in Tianjin, China. (Photo by Suo Takekuma – Pool/Getty Images)

Pool | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Sometimes one photograph tells the story better than any communique or summit declaration.

A widely shared clip of Chinese President Xi Jinping, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin laughing together in Beijing has already gone viral.

On the surface, it appears to be an easy exchange between three leaders. But analysts say it reflects a delicate mix of competing rivalries and shifting power dynamics.

Gautam Bambawale, India’s former ambassador to China, told CNBC’s Inside India: “The dragon and the elephant are not dancing as yet. They are just looking at each other from opposite sides of a room and trying to assess what are the implications of the relationship between the two? It’s going to take time to bring the relationship back on track.”

The obstacles are clear. The border dispute between India and China remains unresolved since the 2020 clashes. Beijing’s close partnership with Pakistan — extending beyond economic corridors into military equipment and intelligence cooperation — further constrains how far ties can develop.

This week’s Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit gave the photograph its backdrop. The SCO is expanding in size and ambition, but as Jeremy Chan at Eurasia Group pointed out, more prominence does not necessarily mean more relevance.

“The SCO, while it’s generally described as a security organization, really doesn’t focus on military matters per se, and on all of the global conflicts that have taken place recently, whether that’s Ukraine or in Gaza, the SCO has essentially been absent,” Chan told CNBC.

The timing of the meeting is also notable. With former U.S. President Donald Trump raising tariffs and unsettling global markets, Beijing is using the SCO to emphasize its outreach to the Global South. Chan said Trump is “breathing new life” into the summit, giving China a chance to frame its diplomacy as more dependable than Washington’s.

The photo-op has also drawn scrutiny in U.S. media. The New York Times described the interaction as a “smiling manifestation of a troika that Moscow had recently said it hoped to revive,” noting the optics of closeness between Modi and Putin, who even shared a ride to a meeting on the sidelines. The report argued that India’s traditionally cautious bureaucracy might once have avoided such overt displays with China and Russia, but Trump’s sweeping tariffs leave New Delhi with “little incentive” to hold back.

Multipolarity, defined differently


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