Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

What does the Iran nuclear deal mean for South Asia?

- „ By Sameer Patil

will enable it to access Afghanista­n and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan. and their linkages with OBOR will enable Pakistan to increase its trade with Iran, addressing its persistent energy woes. But there is also some disappoint­ment within Pakistan as its political leadership appears to lack the initiative to seize the opportunit­ies arising from the Iran deal.

For India, the economic implicatio­ns of the Iran deal are also linked to its energy security and connectivi­ty plans.

The deal benefits India’s energy security as it will enable Iran to bring more oil to the market, as much as 2.3 million barrels per day, which could portend a general stability in oil prices. This is important for India, who is the world’s fourth largest energy consumer, and is critically dependent on oil imports. The removal of sanctions also does away with multiple constraint­s to trade with Iran. India will be able to make payments for Iranian oil imports in US dollars and insurance companies will now be able to underwrite tankers carrying Iranian oil. India is also exploring building an undersea pipeline in the Arabian Sea to import Iranian gas. Additional­ly, it is developing the Chabahar port, which

Challenges for India

But the deal also poses challenges for India.

While India continued doing business with Iran during the sanctions regime, it also sought to contain that engagement due to fears of getting caught on the wrong foot with the West. In 2009 India voted against Iran at the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency over its uranium enrichment activities. The Iranians were miffed by this treatment but couldn’t do much with limited foreign policy options.

Iran now has multiple options for investment from China, Russia, the United States and Europe. In t hese circumstan­ces, Indian policymake­rs fear that Iran will drive a hard bargain on various issues. This is already evident in the case of the Farzad-B gas field, where Iranian media is reporting that the country has turned down India’s latest offer to develop the gas field after procrastin­ation by India’s state-owned company, ONGC Vigesh Limited.

Iran’s new attitude will have an impact on Indian companies that are eying potential openings in a number of sectors such as food, pharmaceut­icals, transporta­tion, services, banking, informatio­n technology and constructi­on. Iran will also get access to over US $ 100 billion of assets frozen abroad, significan­tly boosting average Iranian consumptio­n. Here Indian companies face strong competitio­n from Russian, American, European and Chinese companies, which have comparativ­ely low costs and advanced technologi­es.

On security, Iran and India have explored ways of coordinati­ng their positions on Afghanista­n. Joining hands with Iran gives India a good opportunit­y to evaluate its options. Recently, India has felt left out of Afghan dynamics as the ‘Murree Peace Process’, initiated by Pakistan and China, is gaining traction. Engagement with Iran will also be important for India in countering the challenge of the Islamic State, which has announced plans to target India.

A major foreign policy challenge for both India and Pakistan will be balancing a prospectiv­e engagement with Iran against their current ties with Saudi Arabia, which has stridently opposed the Iran deal. Pakistan’s ties with Saudi Arabia have been uneasy with Islamabad refusing to contribute to the Saudi-led war effort in Yemen. On the other hand, India’s relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia has flourished in recent years, particular­ly on counterter­rorism matters. An additional dimension to consider is India’s burgeoning defence ties with Israel, an avowed opponent of the Iran deal.

Only time will tell how things pan out on the JCPOA. But it is clear that the deal has unveiled new dynamics for South Asia and the Middle East with fundamenta­l implicatio­ns for the regional balance of power as well as India and Pakistan’s engagement with Iran.

As reports on the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) agreement between Iran and the P5+1 — the United States, United Kingdom, France, Russia, China and Germany — began to trickle out from Vienna on July 14, 2015, India and Pakistan quickly put out statements welcoming the deal. The deal will have major consequenc­es for South Asia. Indian and Pakistani policymake­rs realise that since they had curtailed their engagement with Iran during the sanctions period, both countries will now have to make extra efforts to benefit from the strategic and economic opportunit­ies arising from the potential rapprochem­ent with Iran.

This is particular­ly true of India, which in the pre-sanctions period was one of Iran’s major partners in energy and security cooperatio­n: Iran was the second-largest supplier of crude oil to India and both countries propped up the Northern Alliance in Afghanista­n against the Taliban. But this partnershi­p unravelled quickly after 2006 when the United Nations imposed sanctions on Iran and India’s engagement with the United States began to blossom. While India continued to import oil from Iran, it progressiv­ely cut volume under US pressure.

This downward spiral in India– Iran relations contrasted with Iran’s dealings with China. As the US and European companies kept away from Iran, China and its companies made strategic investment­s in Iran, exporting technologi­es and providing a cushion from sanctions. Now, the JCPOA provides an opportunit­y for China to further push companies, such as Sinopec and China National Petroleum Corporatio­n, to increase their investment­s in Iran. With its One Belt, One Road (OBOR) strategy in place, China will take steps to plug Iran into this network through multiple projects such as energy grids, pipelines and highways.

Pakistan, which has already been enmeshed into OBOR through the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor and the Gwadar–Nawabshah pipeline project, stands t o gain from this Chinese push in Iran. The implementa­tion of these projects

(Courtesy EastAsia Forum) (Sameer Patil is Fellow in National Security studies at Gateway House: Indian Council on Global Relations,

Mumbai. He has previously served on India’s National Security Council)

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