Iran-India Port Deal: Diplomatic Challenges
India's foreign minister has said his company will work to communicate the benefits of a strategic port project in Iran, after the United States said Indian firms working on the project risked sanctions.
Iran and India this week signed a contract to develop and equip the long-stalled Chabahar port in an agreement that would give New Delhi 10 years of access to the facility, at a time when its government is seeking to grow trade in west and central Asia.
Washington has warm ties with India but a longstanding adversarial relationship with Iran, soured further by Tehran's support for Hamas in its war with Israel.
"It's a question of communicating and convincing and getting people to understand that this is actually for everybody's benefit," Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said at a public event in the city of Kolkata on.
"If you look at the US's own attitude to Chabahar in the past, the US has been appreciative of the fact that Chabahar has a larger relevance," he added.
The United States had begrudgingly accepted the port project while the US military was in Afghanistan, as it saw New Delhi as a valuable partner to back the Kabul government that fell in 2021.
But the State Department warned that Indian companies working on the project risked US sanctions.
The deal signed this week will see India Ports Global Limited invest $370 million into "providing strategic equipment" and "developing the transport infrastructure of the port" over the coming decade.
India in 2016 agreed to finance the development of the Iranian port as a trading hub for central Asia.
In 2019, before the Covid-19 pandemic, both countries agreed to speed up the project after a visit by Jaishankar to Tehran.
Chabahar port is on the Indian Ocean about 100 kilometers west of the Pakistani border. Pakistan, India's historic rival, is developing its Gwadar port with the support of China.