West Asia in Transition: India's Strategic Interests in an Emerging Multipolar Order
Syllabus Mapping: GS2: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and affecting India’s interests
West Asia is witnessing a strategic realignment driven by regional conflicts, shifting alliances and great-power competition. As India’s extended neighbourhood, the region presents significant opportunities in energy security and connectivity, while simultaneously testing its diplomacy and strategic autonomy.
Changing Geopolitical Landscape of West Asia
- Regional Order in Transition: The traditional US security umbrella is being recalibrated as Gulf states diversify defence partnerships and reduce overdependence on a single guarantor.
- Pragmatic Regionalism: Regional states are increasingly prioritising economic diversification, investment and strategic partnerships over ideological or sectarian alignments. The Al-Ula Declaration (2021) ended the Gulf diplomatic rift, while Gulf states maintain relations with both the US and China.
- Emergence of Geo-economic Competition: West Asia has evolved into a critical hub for connectivity corridors, logistics, energy investments and global supply chains, making economics central to regional geopolitics. Eg: Competing initiatives such as IMEC, China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC).
- Transformation of the Iran Question: Iran has evolved from being viewed primarily as an isolated regional actor into the central variable shaping Gulf security, maritime stability and nuclear diplomacy. Eg: Even after the 2026 conflict, Gulf states continued engagement with Tehran rather than confrontation.
Strategic Opportunities for India
- Strengthening Energy Security and Energy Transition: West Asia remains India’s principal energy partner while emerging as a key collaborator in green hydrogen, renewables and clean technologies, supporting India’s long-term energy transition. Eg: the India–Saudi Arabia Strategic Partnership Council and India–UAE CEPA have expanded cooperation in clean energy.
- Emerging Connectivity and Trade Corridors: West Asia’s strategic location provides India with an opportunity to become a major player in Eurasian connectivity through multimodal corridors. Eg: India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), Chabahar Port and the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC).
- Deepening Strategic Partnerships with Regional Middle Powers: The rise of Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar as autonomous regional actors enables India to pursue issue-based partnerships without being constrained by bloc politics. Eg: Comprehensive Strategic Partnerships with the UAE and Saudi Arabia; expanding defence cooperation with Gulf states.
- Technology and Innovation Partnerships: Gulf countries are investing heavily in AI, semiconductors, fintech and digital infrastructure, opening avenues for India’s technology ecosystem. Eg: The India–UAE Virtual Trade Corridor, cooperation in digital public infrastructure, fintech and artificial intelligence.
- Leadership in the Emerging Multipolar Order: India’s balanced engagement with Israel, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Palestine enhances its credibility as a trusted and independent partner capable of engaging all stakeholders.
- Maritime Security and Indian Ocean Cooperation: Growing concerns over maritime security have expanded opportunities for India to enhance naval cooperation, HADR and Maritime Domain Awareness in the Indian Ocean. Eg: Operation Sankalp, anti-piracy deployments in the Gulf of Aden and cooperation with Gulf navies.
Challenges for India
- Energy Supply Vulnerability: Regional conflicts can disrupt oil supplies and increase import costs. Eg: Red Sea crisis and Strait of Hormuz tensions.
- Multi-alignment Dilemma: Maintaining relations with Israel, Iran and Arab Gulf states has become increasingly complex.
- Chokepoint Vulnerability: Attacks in the Red Sea threaten critical Sea Lines of Communication. Eg: Houthi attacks disrupted commercial shipping.
- Geopolitical Contestation: US-China rivalry in West Asia complicates India’s strategic choices.
- Diaspora Security: Conflict could endanger Indian nationals and affect remittance flows. Eg: Operation Ajay (Israel) and Operation Sindhu (Iran evacuation).
- Geo-economic Disruption: Regional instability may delay projects like IMEC and affect India’s connectivity ambitions.
Way Ahead
- Calibrated Multi-Alignment: Deepen issue-based engagement with stakeholders while preserving strategic autonomy and avoiding bloc politics.
- Diversify Energy and Build Future Energy Partnerships: India–Saudi Green Hydrogen Task Force and India–UAE Energy Security Partnership.
- Fast-Track Strategic Connectivity Corridors: Operationalise IMEC, Chabahar Port and INSTC to reduce logistical vulnerabilities and enhance India’s access to Europe, Central Asia and Africa.
- Deepen Geo-economic Partnerships: Leverage CEPA with UAE, sovereign wealth funds and investments in AI, logistics, semiconductors and infrastructure to strengthen India’s economic footprint.
- Promote a Rules-Based and Inclusive Regional Order: Support peaceful dialogue, UNCLOS, freedom of navigation and respect for sovereignty while advocating a two-state solution and regional stability.
By combining strategic autonomy with geo-economic statecraft, India can transform the changing geopolitics of West Asia into a catalyst for its long-term national interests.
PRELIMS BOOSTERS
1 . Indus Waters Treaty (IWT)
- In April 2025, India kept the Treaty in abeyance following the Pahalgam terrorist attack, citing sustained cross-border terrorism and a fundamental change in circumstances.
- The Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) was signed between India and Pakistan on 19 September 1960 at Karachi, with the World Bank as a signatory and facilitator.
- Signed by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru (India) and President Ayub Khan (Pakistan).
- Allocates the Eastern Rivers (Ravi, Beas and Sutlej) to India and the Western Rivers (Indus, Jhelum and Chenab) to Pakistan.
- India has exclusive rights over Eastern rivers, subject to certain Treaty obligations.
- India is permitted non-consumptive use, domestic use, irrigation and run-of-the-river hydropower projects on the Western Rivers, subject to treaty provisions.
- Established the Permanent Indus Commission (PIC) with one Commissioner from each country to facilitate cooperation and resolve technical issues.
- Provides a graded dispute resolution mechanism—Permanent Indus Commission → Neutral Expert → Court of Arbitration.
- Widely regarded as one of the world’s most successful transboundary water-sharing agreements, having survived multiple wars and bilateral tensions.
- Major Indian Projects under IWT
- Kishanganga Hydroelectric Project – Jhelum basin.
- Ratle Hydroelectric Project – Chenab.
- Baglihar Hydroelectric Project – Chenab.
- Pakal Dul Project – Marusudar (Chenab tributary).
2. Fixed Dose Combination (FDC) Drugs
- India has periodically banned several irrational FDCs in the interest of public health and patient safety.
- Fixed Dose Combination (FDC) is a pharmaceutical formulation containing two or more Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) combined in a fixed ratio in a single dosage form.
- Regulated under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 and New Drugs and Clinical Trials Rules, 2019.
- Regulatory Authority: Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) under the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI).
- Aims to improve patient compliance, reduce pill burden and enhance therapeutic effectiveness.
- Commonly used for treating Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Diabetes, Hypertension and Cardiovascular diseases.
- Irrational or unapproved FDCs may increase the risk of adverse drug reactions, antimicrobial resistance and inappropriate dosing.
- New FDCs require prior approval from CDSCO/DCGI before manufacture or marketing in India.
3. Nameri Tiger Reserve
- Nameri Tiger Reserve is located in Sonitpur district, Assam, covering an area of 344 sq. km.
- It is one of the four Tiger Reserves in Assam, along with Kaziranga, Manas and Orang.
- Shares its northern boundary with Pakke Tiger Reserve in Arunachal Pradesh, forming an important transboundary wildlife landscape.
- As per the 2025 State Forest Department estimation, validated by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), the tiger population increased from 3 (AITE 2022) to 12 by the end of 2025, a four-fold increase in three years.
- The revival is attributed to scientific monitoring, habitat protection and strengthened conservation measures in the Nameri–Sonai Rupai landscape.
- The reserve also witnessed the return of tigers to Sonai Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary after more than two decades of local extinction.