Wait...
Search Global Export Import Trade Data
Recent Searches: No Recent Searches

US sanctions on India’s strategic Chabahar port in Iran come into effect: What's next for New Delhi?.


Date: 30-09-2025
Subject: US sanctions on India’s strategic Chabahar port in Iran come into effect: What's next for New Delhi?
The United States' renewed sanctions on India’s Chabahar port project in Iran came into effect on Monday, in a significant setback for New Delhi’s regional ambitions and its decades-long strategic engagement with Tehran.

The move ends a rare exemption that had allowed Indian companies to continue developing the Chabahar port despite earlier US sanctions on Iran.

The sanctions follow a return of wide-ranging UN measures on Iran, as Washington, European allies, and Israel continue to pressure Tehran over its nuclear program

State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott told AFP that the exemption was revoked “consistent with President Trump’s maximum pressure policy to isolate the Iranian regime” and that it had been made “for Afghanistan reconstruction assistance and economic development.”

A strategic gateway for India's trade
Chabahar has been central to India’s efforts to bypass Pakistan for access to Afghanistan and the wider Middle East. In 2018, the Trump administration had provided an exemption to allow Indian firms to invest in the port, citing Afghanistan reconstruction and regional economic development. But the ground has shifted dramatically since then.

Kabul is now under Taliban control after the US withdrawal in 2021, rendering India’s original plans to use Chabahar as a secure trade corridor into Afghanistan more complex. Despite this, India last year committed $370 million through state-run India Ports Global Limited (IPGL) to develop the port, which lies near the Pakistani border in Iran’s Baluchistan region.

“Chabahar has strategic value for India: regional connectivity with Iran and Afghanistan and the Middle East without being held back by friction with Pakistan,” said Aparna Pande, research fellow at the Hudson Institute.

Barely 200 kilometers away, China is building the Gwadar port on the Pakistani side, giving Beijing a major foothold in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean. Analysts warn that the US sanctions now place India in a delicate position, balancing investment ambitions with the risk of violating American regulations.

India weighs its next move
Under US law, IPGL and other Indian companies have 45 days to exit Chabahar or face frozen US-based assets and barred transactions. Joshua Kretman, counsel at law firm Dentons and former State Department sanctions official, warned that inclusion on the US list “has the potential to create a kind of cascading effect where banks and other companies may not transact with the designated business.”

“If that sanctioned entity operates globally, needs access to major banks or dollar clearing, there is legitimate reason for concern,” he added.

Indian foreign ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal offered a cautious statement: “We are presently examining the implications that this revocation has for India.” Analysts predict that New Delhi is likely to adopt a wait-and-watch approach.

“At a time when there is an American administration which is imposing sanctions and tariffs as punitive action, India will likely adopt a wait-and-watch approach,” Pande said.

Some experts suggest India could leverage its Iran ties as a tool in broader geopolitical negotiations.

Kadira Pethiyagoda, geopolitical strategist, said: “India may choose to wear the sanctions as part of a broader effort amongst non-Western Great Powers, including China and Russia, to reduce reliance on the US economy and decouple from Western-controlled financial networks.”

The sanctions come amid mounting tensions between Washington and New Delhi, including tariffs over India’s oil purchases from Russia.

Source Name : Economic Times

Get Sample Now

Which service(s) are you interested in?
 Export Data
 Import Data
 Both
 Buyers
 Suppliers
 Both
OR
 Exim Help
+


What is New?

Date: 18-09-2025
Corrigendum
Corrigendum to Notification No. 9/2025 – Central Tax (Rate) dated 17.09.2025

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 13/2025-Central Tax (Rate)
Seeks to amend Notification No. 21/2018- Central Tax (Rate) dated 26.07.2018.

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 14/2025-Central Tax (Rate)
Seeks to notify GST rate for bricks.

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 37/ 2025-Customs
Seeks to amend Notification No.19/2019-Customs dated 06.07.2019

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 38/ 2025-Customs
Seeks to amend Notification No.29/2025-Customs dated 09.05.2025

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 39/2025-Customs
Seeks to amend Notification No.50/2017-Customs, dated 30.06.2017

Date: 17-09-2025
NOTIFICATIONNo. 15/2025 – Central Tax
Seeks to exempt taxpayer with annual turnover less than Rs 2 Crore from filing annual return.

Date: 17-09-2025
NOTIFICATION No. 16/2025–Central Tax
Seeks to notify clauses (ii), (iii) of section 121, section 122 to section 124 and section 126 to 134 of Finance Act, 2025 to come into force.

Date: 17-09-2025
Notification No. 12/2025-Central Tax (Rate)
Seeks to amend Notification No. 8/2018- Central Tax (Rate) dated 25.01.2018.

Date: 17-09-2025
NOTIFICATION No. 14/2025 – Central Tax
Seeks to notify category of persons under section 54(6).



Exim Guru Copyright © 1999-2025 Exim Guru. All Rights Reserved.
The information presented on the site is believed to be accurate. However, InfodriveIndia takes no legal responsibilities for the validity of the information.
Please read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy before you use this Export Import Data Directory.

EximGuru.com

C/o InfodriveIndia Pvt Ltd
F-19, Pocket F, Okhla Phase-I
Okhla Industrial Area
New Delhi - 110020, India
Phone : 011 - 40703001