There was a moment at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum that probably didn't make headlines everywhere, but it should have.
When an Indian journalist tried to paint the China-Pakistan Comprehensive Strategic Partnership as something Moscow should worry about, Russian President Vladimir Putin didn't exactly embrace the premise.
His response was telling in its dismissiveness: "Pakistan is a large country, and it has multifaceted ties with different countries. They need to take into account cooperation with China, but everyone is developing relations with China."
On the surface, it might sound like a routine diplomatic non-answer. But anyone who watches Russia-South Asia relations closely knows something shifted here. The subtext was clear Moscow isn't losing sleep over India trying to make Pakistan's China ties into some sort of threat vector. Instead, Russia appears to be recalibrating its entire approach to the region, and Pakistan finds itself in an interestingly different position than where it stood even a few years ago.


