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India walks tightrope as U.S. toughens Iran sanctions

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India walks tightrope as U.S. toughens Iran sanctions - The Washington Post


NEW DELHI — A bomb attack Monday on an Israeli diplomat’s car in New Delhi underlines the tough balancing act that India has to perform as it attempts to manage its relations with the United States and Israel, and with Iran.

Despite Iran’s denial that it was involved, the incident complicates an equation that India has managed adroitly for years. As U.S. pressure mounts on Iran, the government in New Delhi finds itself in an increasingly uncomfortable position: Its dependence on Iranian oil and unwillingness to join U.S.-led sanctions against Iran put it at odds with Washington over a top U.S. national security priority.

 Intelligence shows that Iran received foreign assistance to overcome key hurdles in acquiring technology that could lead to a nuclear weapon, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Remaining neutral in one of the world’s most intense contests could become increasingly tough. At risk are not only the chances of building a united front to pressure Tehran to abandon its uranium-enrichment program, but also a burgeoning partnership between the world’s largest democracies.

“We can avoid a train wreck between the United States and India, but it’s going to take some degree of seriousness and some work,” said Richard Fontaine, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security in Washington.

Iran is India’s second-largest source of crude oil, and officials say it would be difficult and potentially expensive to shift suppliers. With India’s economic growth slowing and global oil prices rising, New Delhi is reluctant to absorb those costs.

Wary of interfering in other countries’ affairs, India is also reluctant to join a U.S.-led coalition against a Muslim country, something that would be politically unpopular here.

“We have accepted sanctions that are made by the United Nations,” Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai warned last month. “Other sanctions do not apply to us. We don’t accept that position.”

India has quietly begun to diversify away from Iranian oil in recent years, with Tehran’s share of imports declining to 11.3 percent of the total in 2010-11 from 16.4 percent two years previously. Mathai said at a forum in Washington this week that the proportion had since fallen further, to “just below 10 percent.”

Energy ties

If Monday’s bomb attack is conclusively traced back to Iran — especially if Iran is found to be working with a local Islamist militant group, violating India’s territorial integrity to attack a third country’s diplomats — the strains between New Delhi and Tehran could erupt into the open.

“There are powerful long-term reasons for India’s cultivation of Iran, and these remain compelling,” said Shashank Joshi of the Royal United Services Institute in London. “At the same time, this touches on a very raw nerve for the Indian security establishment — and there will be many now arguing that India should stop working so hard to shield Iran from international pressure.”

Nevertheless, many here say it would be unrealistic to suggest that India completely sever its energy ties with Iran. Indeed, an Indian delegation is due in Tehran this month to work out a way around the U.S.-led sanctions regime, which has made it difficult for India to pay for Iranian oil.

The Iranian ambassador to India announced last week that an agreement had been reached to pay 45 percent of the bill in Indian rupees, a currency that is not fully convertible and would not normally be used for such a transaction, an indication of Tehran’s readiness to compromise to keep the oil flowing.

Nor is India keen to increase its dependence on Saudi imports, as Washington has suggested. Saudi Arabia is India’s biggest supplier of crude oil, but its role in promoting a radical vision of Islam in the region engenders suspicion here.

 Intelligence shows that Iran received foreign assistance to overcome key hurdles in acquiring technology that could lead to a nuclear weapon, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

 “We’ll talk to the Saudis, but why would we want to go for excessive dependence on their energy supplies at a time when we are not convinced their leverage in South Asia is being used in a positive way?” asked Siddharth Varadarajan, a strategic affairs expert and editor of the Hindu newspaper. “I don’t think India would like to be forced away from being a major customer of Iranian oil.”

Worries about conflict

India has made it clear that it opposes a nuclear-armed Iran, supporting the United States against Iran in votes at the International Atomic Energy Agency on four occasions in recent years, despite complaints from Tehran and significant political fallout at home. India also backed away from plans to build a pipeline to import Iranian natural gas through Pakistan, partly because of American pressure.

But from India’s perspective, any effort to isolate Iran seems dangerous and counterproductive. India has long historical and cultural ties with predominantly Shiite Iran, and tens of millions of Shiites live among the more than 150 million Muslims in India.

India is also deeply concerned about the potential fallout from a Western conflict with Iran, especially if it were to worsen sectarian tensions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims across the region.

“Many oil-producing areas are dominated” by Shiites, said Ranjit Singh Kalha, a former Indian ambassador to Iraq. “It’s sectarian strife that will cause problems; that’s what worries us. It might ignite the whole region.”

Conflict with Iran could also force the United States into a closer alliance with Pakistan, and what many people refer to as a “military-jihadi complex” there.

Mathai put India’s concerns as diplomatically as possible this week.

“Peace and stability and a climate of moderation in the region are absolutely vital for us,” he told the audience at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

What he meant, commentators here said, is that India would choose a nuclear-armed Iran rather than war as the lesser of two evils.

But the Indian government’s position has been criticized here.

Varadarajan said India should have done more to talk the two sides down from confrontation, “to be a strong, independent voice for sanity in the region,” and to assume the global role that its ambitions for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council imply.

Last week, the U.S. ambassador-designate to India, Nancy Powell, defended India’s policy toward Iran under some pointed questioning at her confirmation hearings. She underlined India’s moves to curb oil imports and support the United States at the IAEA, while also promising to work on the issue “very seriously and very early in my tenure.”

While it is unrealistic to expect India to cut off all oil imports from Iran, there is a middle ground. New Delhi could play a role “to provide perspectives on what is happening in the region, as well as to carry messages,” Fontaine said.

“But we have to be sensitive to politics in India as well as the U.S.,” he said. “Publicly goading India to get tough with Iran is not going to result in the outcome the U.S. is seeking. . . . The question is, how do we work with India as a partner?
 
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India walks a fine line as U.S., Iran spar over nuclear deal
As the United States and Israel sparred with Iran at the United Nations this week, India is walking a fine balance between emerging blocs in West Asia, say experts.

While on one hand, the government is strengthening its ties with the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia-led Sunni Arab states, on the other, Infrastructure Minister Nitin Gadkari gives a firm commitment on completing the Chabahar development project in Iran in 2018, and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj affirms India’s support for the Palestinian cause, calling it a “reference point” of India’s foreign policy.

“We are recognising the complexities of dealing with the Middle East, where there are no straight lines to choose from,” said P.R. Kumaraswamy, Professor of Middle Eastern Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University. “We are basically reaching out to all countries there, with a view to seeing where they can help us.”

However, matters may escalate in October, as the U.S. is expected to announce whether it will continue to certify that Iran is in compliance with the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) multilateral nuclear deal. If the Trump administration refuses to certify and withdraws from the deal, Iran President Rouhani announced on Wednesday, Iran would respond “decisively and resolutely” indicating that the agreement would be in jeopardy. He also made a veiled reference to Mr. Trump as a “rogue newcomer.”

In his speech the day before, Mr. Trump had also called Iran a “rogue nation.”

As a result, India’s relations with Iran, including plans to invest $500 million in the Chabahar project, the $1.6 billion rail-line from Iran to Afghanistan, as well as about $9 billion in trade of which about half is in oil, could be impacted, especially if the U.S. increases pressure on New Delhi to reduce ties with Tehran, as it did in 2013 while negotiating the JCPOA.

“The Iranian role is seeking hegemony and disruptive to neighbouring states. Treating Iran as a normal player in the long term won’t be to [India’s] benefit. This will come to a head at some point,” cautioned Israeli scholar Jonathan Spyer from the Rubin Centre in Herziliya. He was in New Delhi to address the India Foundation.

“India is a big country, a large market and no one will want to push India to choose one side, but events may overtake everyone. Iran’s subversive tactics are not just about JCPOA, but other ways where it plays a divisive role, supports destabilising forces,” he told The Hindu, indicating Iran’s alleged support to Houthis in Yemen, Shia militia in Iraq and Syria, the Hezbollah and Palestinian groups.

When asked, Mr. Gadkari denied any pressure from the U.S. over the Chabahar deep water project. He said the government had “finalised orders” for infrastructure equipment out of an allocated $85.2 million “without any difficulty.” However, India’s oil imports from Iran have been in steady decline since 2016, and hit their lowest level in 18 months in August 2017, with bad blood between Tehran and New Delhi over Iran’s decision to award its Farzad-B oilfield to Russian company Gazprom.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...an-spar-over-nuclear-deal/article19733664.ece
 
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