India, April 1 -- Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba's discussions with external affairs minister S Jaishankar and deputy national security adviser Vikram Misri during his first visit to India focused on reviving bilateral relations and, more significantly, seeking New Delhi's support for a planned peace summit to be hosted by Switzerland. Ukraine, which was earlier critical of India's stance on the invasion by Russia, has apparently softened its position. Kyiv also realises the importance of engaging with New Delhi given its stature in the Global South, in order to ensure the success of the peace summit at a time when the Russia-Ukraine war appears to be stalemated amid growing fatigue in Europe. While the leadership of European States still speaks publicly about standing by Ukraine, key economies such as Germany are in trouble. There are growing concerns in Europe about what a possible Donald Trump presidency could mean for the United States's (US) support for Ukraine. All of this underscores the urgency to secure the support of the Global South - which has largely seen the Ukraine conflict as a war of rich nations and refused to take a position on it - for the peace summit. It is in this context that Kuleba has spoken of the possibility of India becoming the first major non-western power to support Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's peace formula....