試す 金 - 無料
West Asia’s security is now India’s problem too
Hindustan Times Jammu
|April 21, 2026
At a moment when tensions in the Gulf are once again rising — marked by instability in the Strait of Hormuz and the stalling of US-Iran diplomacy — much of the analysis remains narrowly focused on familiar powers and traditional alliances.
The Gulf's security cannot be separated from that of the Indian Ocean.
(AFP)
This framing misses a critical shift.India, long viewed as an external economic partner, is now becoming a consequential security stakeholder in West Asia. Not through military projection, but through something potentially more durable: Deep economic exposure, strategic interdependence and a growing capacity to shape the conditions for stability.
More than 60% of India’s crude oil imports originate from West Asia. The uninterrupted flow of energy through the Strait of Hormuz is, therefore, not simply a strategic priority but an economic lifeline. Recent threats to shipping lanes and heightened maritime risk have exposed the vulnerability of this dependence. For both Gulf States and India, escalation is no longer merely undesirable; it is economically untenable.
The collapse of diplomatic efforts between Washington and Tehran adds a further layer of uncertainty. Rather than resolution, the region now faces a prolonged phase of managed confrontation — one in which miscalculation becomes more likely and localised incidents risk triggering wider disruption. For India, this environment reinforces the need for deeper engagement, not as a distant stakeholder but as a directly affected actor.
このストーリーは、Hindustan Times Jammu の April 21, 2026 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Hindustan Times Jammu からのその他のストーリー
Hindustan Times Jammu
It's blooming time
The body as a site of insurgency.
4 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
Women’s rage finds a voice and vocabulary
You couldn’t have missed it — the outpouring of women’s anger across India this month.
2 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
Bill for 3-year H-1B pause introduced in US Congress
A group of Republican lawmakers has introduced a bill in the US Congress for a three-year pause to the HI-B visa programme, contending that it has been hijacked to replace American workers with cheap foreign labour.
1 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
Prose and cons of a beloved city
Allahabad has changed over and over. In her memoir, Mamta Kalia writes of the city she knew, one of ease, informality, literary genius
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
Six appeal: On IPL and the era of boundary hunters
IN A DIFFERENT LEAGUE
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
How institutions build credibility and sustain it
Institutions endure, but their character is shaped by those who lead them, and those leaders are shaped by the circumstances of their appointment
5 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
The fever news channels catch on counting day
‘Kya lagta hai, kaun aayega iss baar?’
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
The deferred FCRA bill calls for a quiet burial
It'sa paradox — to put it mildly — that justas the Bharatiya Janata Party was doing its best to reach out to Christian voters in Kerala, its government in Delhi tried to pass the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill.
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
The many moods of Thundercat
BASS TO THE FUTURE
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Hindustan Times Jammu
First-word problems
What did the earliest writers write about? A new book explores letters about kings, pleas for help from a bereft mother, manuals on how to banish ghosts, as well as poems and fictional tales, classroom exercises and ancient doodles - all dating to before 1500 BCE
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

