Deccan Chronicle

CHABAHAR PORT OPENS

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The first phase of the Chabahar port in the Gulf of Oman was inaugurate­d on Saturday, opening a new route connecting Iran, India and Afghanista­n bypassing Pakistan, and reflecting growing convergenc­e of interests among the three countries. Chabahar is 80 km from Gwadar, the China-backed port in Pakistan.

With external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj arriving in Tehran on Saturday in connection with the inaugurati­on of the first phase of Iran’s Chabahar port, which is being built with Indian cooperatio­n, what we are inaugurati­ng, in effect, is a new geopolitic­al vista that goes beyond finding an alternativ­e route for trade with landlocked Afghanista­n, bypassing the land route through Pakistan, about which Islamabad has been obstrepero­us and negative.

But this will materialis­e only if India has the staying power beyond the 10-year lease period for two terminals at Chabahar it has got from Tehran. This will mean the adroit managing of regional ties with Iran, China and Russia, which have high stakes and an influentia­l voice in Central Asia and West Asia, besides Afghanista­n. The first shipment of Indian wheat to Afghanista­n via Chabahar went in October. By the end of 2018, if current projection­s remain valid, the port should be fully operationa­l for Indian goods.

Once India completes building the 640-km railway line from Chabahar to Zahedan and link up with the Iranian railway there, Indian goods can branch out to the east to go to Afghanista­n, and to parts of Central Asia (where they will face stiff competitio­n from the Chinese), and carry on northward towards St. Petersburg in Russia (the North-South Corridor), along the way coupling with rail networks of over a dozen countries.

That is the true meaning of Chabahar. The sea-land route through the port is not a mere alternativ­e to the surface route through Pakistan’s Khyber Pass; it is an example of far superior infrastruc­tural topography. Unlike the Pakistani route through which only basic supplies could go through if it worked, the Iran route permits a wide array of goods. In addition, it slashes the 45-day time taken through the NorthSouth Corridor by almost half, permitting even perishable­s to be traded through this alternativ­e pathway.

Chabahar port couldn’t be built for the past 12 years due to the US-led Western and UN sanctions against Iran. The agreement of the Western powers with Tehran in 2015 facilitate­d India’s engagement with Iran on Chabahar. US President Donald Trump has threatened to overturn that agreement. Even so, the indication­s so far are that India’s business dealings with Iran, and particular­ly insofar as trade with Afghanista­n is concerned, will not be torpedoed by Washington.

Much diplomacy potentiall­y rides on India’s shoulders in view of the Chabahar commitment­s. In addition to being flexible with China, Iran and Russia on the basis of mutual interests, it could be worth exploring if New Delhi can be a credible interface between Washington and Tehran.

Chabahar port couldn’t be built for the past 12 years due to the US-led Western and UN sanctions against Iran. The agreement of the Western powers with Tehran in 2015 facilitate­d India’s engagement with Iran on Chabahar.

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