Speaking to reporters in Chicago, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee
was defiant and categorical: it is not possible for India to reduce oil
imports from Iran. Coming within days after the European Union decided
to stop such imports from July, this indicated India’s refusal to join
the western chorus against Tehran. At another level, it also marked a
definite clarity in India’s Iran policy that was on a rollercoaster ride
since early 2005. This public statement however is merely an expression
of intention of the government. Can India pull this off?
For
long, India had ignored or paid insufficient attention to the public
warnings of US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during her March 2005
visit. This was true of the establishment as well as mainstream
intelligentsia. While some chose to ignore, others adopted a defiant
tone. Sovereignty, independent foreign policy and anti-Americanism were
the order of the day. Not many asked about, let alone factored in, the
cost of such an indifferent if not defiant posture.
Everyone saw
the results. Within six months of Rice’s visit, it was a royal mess over
Iran. Despite eloquent public statements about civilizational links
with Iran and the role of the Shi’a factor, New Delhi chose to side with
the US. The decision appears to have been taken without serous internal
deliberations and some believe that even Foreign Minister Natwar Singh
was out of the loop. With the result, the September 2005 vote in the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) displeased both parties; Iran
felt let down, while the US felt emboldened by the effectiveness of its
strong arm tactics.
Since then, India’s Iran policy has become a
hotly debated issue in the country. Those who supported the IAEA vote
could not accept the manner in which the government acted or explained
its decision. Those who criticized the vote could not give a clean bill
of health to Iran’s nuclear ambitions. For some India betrayed a
traditional and reliable friend like Iran, while others felt that by
mismanaging the issue the government has squandered political capital in
Washington. These arguments are strong and valid and the bottom line
was, India’s policy towards Iran was messy and lacked clarity.
This
reflected the larger problem that confronted India. While Iran is an
important player in India’s search for energy security, Tehran’s nuclear
ambitions became controversial. Ever since undisclosed uranium
enrichment plants were disclosed in August 2002, there were growing
concerns over Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Despite public Iranian
statements to the contrary, there were increasing international
suspicions about the peaceful nature of the Iranian nuclear programme.
This concern has only increased over time. Between June 2006 and
December 2012, there were as many as 11 resolutions in the IAEA and UN
Security Council on this issue. Most of them have been widely supported
by the international community, including two of Iran’s closest friends,
China and Russia. New Delhi could have ignored such an overwhelming
international position only at its own peril.
Moreover, despite many friends and well-wishers within India, Iran
has not been an easy customer to deal with, especially since the
election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as President. His two immediate
predecessors, Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammed Khatami, were trying to
mend fences with the outside world, resolved or sidestepped
controversial issues and pursued a more friendlier policy vis-à-vis
their neighbors. Some tentative progress was visible even towards
Washington, depicted as the Big Satan by Ayatollah Khomeini. Ahmadinejad
significantly reversed that trend. Indeed, his public rhetoric and
holocaust denials made an easy target for the West to decry Iran as a
threat not just to Israel but also the wider region. The WikiLeaks
cables speak of the fear and trepidation of Iran’s Arab neighbors.
While
India sought to delink its relations with Iran from its newly found
proximity with the US over civil nuclear cooperation, the agenda of
Washington was different. Since the days of the 1979 Islamic revolution,
the US has been unable to find a coherent and workable policy towards
Tehran. Both Democrats and Republicans vacillated between
marginalization, engagement and confrontation. More than three decades
later, none proved effective. Individuals came and went but the Persian
puzzle remained an enigma in Washington circles.
As India soon
found out, the Iran baggage of the US was too large to decouple and
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had to toe the American line, especially
on the energy front. As per the Delhi Declaration signed during
President Khatami’s visit in January 2003, energy cooperation was to be
the bedrock of Indo-Iranian ties. But this wilted under persistent
American pressures.
The US is, however, only a part of India’s
problems with Iran although this factor enabled everyone to sidestep
other issues that hamper energy cooperation between the two countries.
The Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline is struck also because of price
disputes and security concerns. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) became
problematic because of technological constraints. India’s energy
investments are not lucrative because of the Iranian ban against foreign
ownership of its natural assets. In other words, there are issues that
raise serious doubts about Iran’s ability to be a serious partner in
India’s search for a stable energy security partner. Blaming the US was
relatively easier, publicly acceptable and even politically correct.
Of
late, even commercial transactions with Iran have become a problem for
India. Under American pressure, it has stopped the export, largely by
Reliance, of oil products to Iran. Since December 2010 India’s payments
for its oil imports from Iran have become problematic. Its search for
payments took India to banks in Germany, Turkey and the UAE, and this
month finally both countries agreed to partial payment through Indian
Rupee.
Seen in this wider context the Chicago statement of
Mukherjee came days after the decision of the US and EU to impose a ban
on Iranian oil exports. India’s ability to adhere to its decision to
continue importing Iranian oil rests on a few premises.
Currently,
Iran contributes to about 11 percent of India’s crude oil imports and
it is not possible for India to immediately switch over to alternate
supplier/s. Saudi Arabia, the largest producer with about 10 million
barrels per day, has little room for excess production to meet
additional Indian demands. Some of India’s older refineries are linked
to the specific type of crude imported from Iran and these cannot be
re-modeled quickly to accept other varieties. If the EU countries needed
six months to make alternate arrangements for Iranian oil, India would
require a longer timeframe. Without an alternate supplier, it would be
naïve to expect India to accept oil sanctions against Iran.
Above
all, while India has accepted and adhered to various sanctions imposed
by the UNSC, the oil sanctions are unilateral or multilateral, not
global. Hence, they are not binding upon non-members. Countries accept
such sanctions only if these serve their national interests and discard
them when needed.
Indeed, if the West wanted India to accept
tougher sanctions, then the path should have been different. One of the
interesting outcomes of the post-Cold War world is that no country, big
or small, can be taken for granted. Despite the overwhelming presence of
the US, there are other powers and countries have discovered their
non-parallel interests. Convergence on one issue does not automatically
mean support for other issues and vice-versa. Hence, consultation,
accommodation and compromise would have been more sensible than
bullying. But having rejected the western demand for oil sanctions, the
real test for the Indian government lies in whether it can implement its
public pronouncement?
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