http://www.fprc.in/pdf/IRAN- Pragya.pdf
pp 274-278, "India and Iran - narrowing the separation?"
Notes :
1: “Iran agrees to take all oil payments from India
in rupees”, The Economic Times, Jul 14 2013
3: “Balancing Rivals: India’s Tightrope between Iran
and the United States”, Harsh V. Pant and Julie M. Super, Asia Policy 15,
January 2013
4: “India and Iran Relations: Sustaining the Momentum”,
Meena Singh Roy, IDSA Issue Brief, May 20, 2013
pp 274-278, "India and Iran - narrowing the separation?"
On 27 December 2010, India’s Central Bank
had issued a directive, regarding the payment mechanism for trade with Iran.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced that:
“In
view of the difficulties being experienced by importers and exporters in
payments to and receipts from Iran, the extant provisions have been reviewed
and it has been decided that all eligible current account transactions
including trade transactions with Iran should be settled in any permitted
currency outside the Asian Clearing Union (ACU) mechanism until further notice.”
After about two and a half years’
negotiations and head-scratching, the two countries could finally evolve an
acceptable solution. Iran has agreed to take payments for oil it sells to India
entirely in rupees after US and western sanctions blocked all other payment routes.1
India has been, since July 2011, paying in
Euros to clear 55 per cent of its purchases of Iranian oil through Ankara-
based Halkbank. The remaining 45 per cent was remitted in rupees in the
accounts the Iranian oil companies opened in Kolkata-based UCO Bank.
At a time when the rupee is on a
downslide vis-à-vis dollar, the rupee payment mechanism with Iran against
crude oil imports has offered some path for its upliftment.
According to UCO Bank, crude oil import
from Iran by state-owned Indian Oil Corporation under the rupee payment
mechanism during the last 13 months has been worth $7 billion. Incidentally,
UCO bank is the only Indian bank designated to receive the oil payments in
rupee from oil importing companies.
Indubitably,
this is soothing news for both Tehran and New Delhi. Furthermore, the move
indicates that the Foreign policy establishment at South Block is pursuing an
independent foreign policy paradigm – fundamentally based on the plank of
national interest.
In
fact, erasing all doubts, India’s relations with Iran received a straight drive
from none other than India’s erudite Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh. On a
state visit to Tehran in August 2012 to participate in the Non – Aligned
Movement Summit, he bludgeoned all speculations:
“There are of course difficulties imposed by
western sanctions, but subject to that I think, we will explore ways and means
of developing our relations with Iran.”
Views
and Narratives: Scholarly and Analytical
In
this contentious and highly debated matter of India-Iran relations, it is
noteworthy to delve into what analysts and scholars have commented.
In
the innovative article “Why Iran Should Get the Bomb”2 in the Foreign Affairs magazine, Kenneth N. Waltz
writes:
“Israel has made it clear that it views a
significant Iranian enrichment capacity alone as an unacceptable threat.”
Rather
interestingly, he further comments:
“In fact, by reducing imbalances in military
power, new nuclear states generally produce more regional and international
stability, not less.”
“Israel’s
regional nuclear monopoly”, comments Waltz, “has proved remarkably durable for
the past four decades.”
Actually,
Waltz is stressing on the age-old, yet time-tested concept of “Balance of
Power”. It is worthwhile to remember Bismarck’s policy in pre-1880 Europe in
this regard. By carefully engineering power blocks, he could ward off any major
war. As per Waltz’s thesis, similar situation could be created in the Middle
East today.
Noted
Indian analyst Harsh V Pant and his co-author Julie M Super are categorical as
they predict quite affirmatively:
“Indian interests will continue to shape New
Delhi’s policies toward Iran. Increased pressure from the US may not be the
deciding factor in India-Iran ties.”3
In
fact, the authors seem to be positively skewed toward India’s foreign policy
paradigm. They write:
“New Delhi’s continued emphasis on strategic
autonomy undercuts efforts by Washington to influence Indo-Iranian relations.”
And
the authors seem hopeful that “Washington may find value in considering New
Delhi’s potential role as an interlocutor in reaching out to Tehran.”
Energy
security, according to Pant and Super, is a major concern for India that has
necessitated a delicate balance of relationships amid the competing interests
of the US, Israel and Iran.
The
authors are confident that talks of an Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline will also
continue despite US criticism and a lack of progress in that direction.
Probably, Pant and Super attempt to underscore the nuances of diplomacy that
South Block clinically executes.
Through
the paper “India and Iran relations: Sustaining the Momentum”, Meena Singh Roy
laments4:
“Iran was India’s second largest supplier of
oil but now it has slipped to 6th position.”
Taking
an obvious cue from Dr Singh’s visit, reports Singh Roy, External Affairs
Minister (EAM) Salman Khurshid visited Iran in May 2013 and therein the
decision to upgrade the Chabahar port project was ‘conveyed’.
Actually,
India is interested in investing in the Chabahar container terminal project as
well as the Chabahar-Faraj-Bam railway project. Bam is on the Afghanistan
border and is connected to Zaranj-Delaram road in Afghanistan. The
Delaram–Zaranj Highway, also known as Route 606, is a 135 miles long
two-lane road connecting Zaranj in Nimruz Province, near the Iranian border,
with Delaram in neighboring Farah Province.
It
connects the Afghan–Iranian border with the Kandahar–Herat Highway in Delaram,
which provides connectivity to other major Afghan cities. Route 606 reduces
travel time between Delaram and Zaranj from the earlier 12-14 hours to just 2
hours. The highway was financed fully by development grants from India. It was
designed and constructed by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) of India.
During
the visit of EAM, developments in Afghanistan and Syria were discussed at
length. In a post-2014 Afghanistan, both India and Iran will have common
stakes. A fanatic Taliban-dominated Afghanistan can be detrimental to both a
Shia Iran and a Pakistan-wary India.
Insofar
as Syria is concerned, India and Iran both support the Geneva Communique; which
includes the 6-point Plan of Kofi Annan. However, Iran is much more deeply
involved in a so-called neo-Cold War scenario in Syria since Hezbollah and
Israel are at definite loggerheads. Whereas India’s stance in a civil war
ridden Syria is more philosophical and ideational.
Naturally,
it seems a collision between New Delhi and Tel Aviv is evident if the former
goes on in its reconciliation with Tehran. However, it is germane to note what
Ambassador Prakash Shah opines5
at FPRC Journal:
“It is well known in diplomacy that a
country’s relations with another country are never at the expense of its other
bilateral relations. Independent foreign policies pursued by each country
should not blind either India or Iran to the benefits of closer bilateral
relations.”
Interestingly,
much like Pant and Super, Shah also finds credence in the hypothesis that “in fact, India can work for US-Iran
rapprochement.”
On
the other hand, and quite starkly, executive editor of Iranreview.org,
Mahmoudreza Golshanpezhooh seems rather critical when he opines6:
“the Iranian public opinion was shocked by
India’s positive vote for the anti-Iranian resolution at the Security Council.
We presume that India is not with us anymore. However, no presumptions are
permanent.”
Quoting
a voice of an Indian intellectual; we find that Dr Asghar Ali Engineer
disapprovingly asserts:
“It is so unfortunate that Iran had supported
India on Kashmir issue and yet we supported American stand on nuke issue and
alienated Iran. Since then, our relations cooled off.”7
Such
an assertion may not hold much ground now after Dr Singh’s visit to Tehran in
2012 and India’s positive posture vis-à-vis Iran, without however, totally
disbanding its position with respect to Iranian nukes. India is firm on its
principles as well as on its autonomy in framing foreign policy in a multipolar
world. Pragmatism coupled with national interest defines the contours of
India’s foreign policy architecture.
Deductive Logic?
As
a possible inference, it may be stated that India – Iran bilateral relations
hinge on the following aspects:
First,
US and Israel factor - that is, how both these countries view the development
of Iranian nukes and Tehran’s stance towards IAEA norms. Though USA will be far
more rational in its approach, Tel Aviv can be more demanding from its partners
and allies. But the moot question is whether India is an ally of Israel in the
Middle East? In a best possible mode, India is a strategic and defence partner
with Israel. Keeping in mind what Ambassador Shah said, and in general what
India pursues as a matter of policy, India’s relations with Israel and Iran may
go ahead independently, one relation flourishing without hampering the growth
of the other.
Second,
Iran’s domestic pulls could turn out to be vital. It will depend on the
theocracy and the incumbent regime as to how they react to Western sanctions.
Though termed irrational by Western media, Iranian regime might not be that
puerile to choose the path of self-destruction. Rather, they may skillfully
tread the diplomacy of brinkmanship as was the case during the recent crisis curling
around the geography of Strait of Hormuz.
Third,
Iran’s stance towards nukes remains critical in how India and the rest of the
globe perceive Iran and its motives. If Tehran pursues a clear and
conscientious nuclear policy for peaceful civilian purposes, then it is not at
all a matter of wild guesswork that India will not specifically be on the
belligerent side to thwart such moves by Tehran through resolutions.
In sum, India’s dual pursuit of Energy Security
and Strategic Co-operation will largely define its relations with not only
Iran, but with major powers and blocks, viz,
Russia,
Gulf Co-operation Council, Central Asian Republics, USA and Israel. Iran would
be no exception.
Notes :
1: “Iran agrees to take all oil payments from India
in rupees”, The Economic Times, Jul 14 2013
2:
“Why Iran Should Get the Bomb?”, Kenneth N. Waltz, Foreign Affairs, July/Aug
2012
3: “Balancing Rivals: India’s Tightrope between Iran
and the United States”, Harsh V. Pant and Julie M. Super, Asia Policy 15,
January 2013
4: “India and Iran Relations: Sustaining the Momentum”,
Meena Singh Roy, IDSA Issue Brief, May 20, 2013
5:
in FPRC Journal No. 6, 2011
6:
ibid
7:
ibid
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