Mint Mumbai

West Asia flares up again: what it means for India

- BY N. MADHAVAN

Iran has attacked Israel directly after Israel bombed its consulate in Damascus, Syria, sending tensions in West Asia zooming once again. As the world waits nervously for Tel Aviv’s response, Mint looks at the implicatio­ns for the rest of the world, including India.

What just happened in West Asia?

In a departure from its long-term policy, Iran attacked Israel directly late on Saturday taking tensions in the region to a new high. The attack was in response to the bombing of Iran’s Consulate in Damascus on 1 April, ostensibly by Israel, that killed senior Iranian military commanders. Under pressure from hardliners, Iran launched cruise and ballistic missiles apart from over 300 drones at the Jewish state. Most of them were intercepte­d and the few that got through caused minimal damage. Earlier in the day, Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards seized a container vessel purportedl­y owned by an Israeli billionair­e.

Is an all-out war now a possibilit­y?

That depends pretty much entirely on how Israel responds to this direct attack by Iran. After the attack, Iran said that “the matter can be deemed concluded” indicating that its response to the Consulate bombing is complete. Israel may not view it to be so. Its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that “whoever harms us, we will harm them”. A strong Israeli reaction risks pushing the two countries into an all-out war, possibly dragging the US into it. To be sure, US and UK forces are already involved in this latest escalation. They have shot down Iranian drones over Jordan, Syria and Iraq.

How is the world reacting to the conflagrat­ion?

Leaders from across the world have condemned the Iranian attack and called for immediate cessation of hostilitie­s. US President Joe Biden also re-affirmed his country’s “ironclad” commitment to Israel’s security. World leaders called for restraint to lower tensions in a volatile region which risks descending into chaos. The implicatio­n of that will be significan­t.

4 How badly will the world be impacted?

The immediate impact will be higher oil prices. Crude oil, already trading near six-month highs, may cross $100 per barrel if tension worsens. The benchmark Brent Crude is trading at $90 levels now. An all-out war will cause supply chain disruption­s as Iran will execute its threat to shut down Suez Canal. All this will push inflation up just when developed countries are looking to reduce interest rates. Global economic growth could fall below the 3.1% that the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has projected for 2024.

5 And how will India be affected?

The crisis comes just when India seems poised for rapid economic growth. Inflation is coming under control and industrial production is gathering pace. Add to this strengthen­ing consumptio­n and reviving private investment. A war could derail all this. Though imports from Russia have increased, Arab states account for two-thirds of India’s oil needs. Higher oil prices will push up inflation and delay any interest rates cuts critical to boost GDP growth. Merchandis­e exports, already sluggish, will drop further.

 ?? AFP ?? The remains of a rocket booster after Iran launched missiles towards Israel.
AFP The remains of a rocket booster after Iran launched missiles towards Israel.
 ?? REUTERS ?? An anti-missile system in action after Iran’s attack.
REUTERS An anti-missile system in action after Iran’s attack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India