What Happened
- India officially condoled the death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on March 5, 2026, with Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri visiting the Iranian Embassy in New Delhi to sign the condolence book on behalf of the Government of India.
- Khamenei was killed in a US-Israeli strike on February 28, 2026, during the ongoing Iran war; India's delayed official response came after sustained criticism from opposition parties who accused the government of failing to react promptly to the death of the leader of a country with which India has significant strategic and economic ties.
- External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar also held a telephone conversation with his Iranian counterpart, Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi, separately conveying India's condolences and concern.
- The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) reiterated that India had expressed deep concern at the start of the conflict, urged all sides to exercise restraint, and strongly called for dialogue and diplomacy to achieve an early end to the conflict.
- India's measured but eventually deliberate diplomatic response reflects the tight-rope it walks between maintaining strategic ties with Iran (Chabahar port, INSTC corridor, oil) while managing its partnership with the US and avoiding direct identification with either belligerent.
Static Topic Bridges
India-Iran Relations: Strategic and Economic Dimensions
India and Iran have maintained substantive bilateral relations rooted in civilisational and historical ties, with contemporary engagement centred on energy trade, connectivity projects, and the large Indian diaspora in the region. Despite US sanctions constraining the relationship, India has preserved engagement through multiple channels.
- Iran was historically India's second or third-largest crude oil supplier; US secondary sanctions from 2019 caused India to halt oil imports, though informal channels persisted.
- The Chabahar Port Agreement (May 2024): India signed a 10-year operational agreement for India Ports Global Limited (IPGL) to manage the Shahid-Beheshti terminal, with $250 million in Indian loans and $370 million in infrastructure investment. This provides India a sanctions-resistant connectivity route to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan.
- International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC): A 7,200 km multimodal route connecting India to Russia via Iran — a key alternative to Suez Canal routing for India-Russia trade.
- Iran is home to a significant Indian diaspora, and Shia pilgrimage sites in Iran attract Indian Muslim pilgrims annually.
Connection to this news: India's diplomatic response — condolence through the Foreign Secretary rather than a higher-level government statement — reflects the careful calibration required: acknowledging a relationship of substance without being seen as endorsing the Iranian side in a conflict where the US is a direct belligerent.
India's Strategic Autonomy in West Asia: Balancing Competing Interests
India's West Asia policy is a textbook case of its multi-alignment foreign policy doctrine — maintaining active, substantive partnerships with countries that are adversarial to each other (Israel, Iran, the GCC states, the US) without exclusive alignment with any bloc.
- India maintains robust diplomatic and defence ties with Israel: India is among Israel's largest arms customers, importing drones, missiles, and electronic warfare systems; bilateral trade exceeds $7-8 billion annually.
- India maintains economic and connectivity ties with Iran (Chabahar, INSTC) and energy dependence on GCC states (40%+ of crude imports).
- In conflicts involving these partners, India's default position is: express concern, call for dialogue, avoid condemnation of any party, maintain consular protection of Indian diaspora, and work to evacuate citizens if needed.
- The delayed condolence for Khamenei mirrors India's calibrated approach in previous conflicts — balancing Israel relations without openly sanctioning actions against Iran, a country with which India has explicit agreements under implementation.
Connection to this news: The decision to have the Foreign Secretary (rather than the Prime Minister or External Affairs Minister) sign the condolence book in person strikes a deliberate middle note — acknowledging the relationship without overly emphasising it in a conflict scenario where India's neutrality is under geopolitical scrutiny.
Role of Foreign Secretary in India's Diplomatic Protocol
The Foreign Secretary is the seniormost diplomat in India's foreign ministry — the administrative head of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) and the principal advisor to the External Affairs Minister on foreign policy. The position carries significant protocol weight in bilateral diplomacy.
- The Foreign Secretary is an IFS (Indian Foreign Service) officer of the highest grade, typically serving a 2-year term. Vikram Misri was appointed Foreign Secretary in July 2024.
- Protocol hierarchy for condolences/visits: President/PM > EAM > MoS (External Affairs) > Foreign Secretary > High Commissioner/Ambassador.
- A Foreign Secretary's personal visit to an embassy — rather than a written statement — signals a deliberate diplomatic gesture above routine condolence messages but below political-level intervention.
- Foreign Secretary Misri's visit to the Iranian Embassy was accompanied by EAM Jaishankar's phone call with his Iranian counterpart, ensuring both the personal symbolic gesture and the ministerial-level communication were delivered simultaneously.
Connection to this news: The choice of the Foreign Secretary as the condolence messenger — rather than the EAM or PM — communicates India's position: the relationship with Iran is valued and respected, but India is not taking political ownership of Iran's actions or the conflict in which Khamenei was killed.
Key Facts & Data
- Ayatollah Ali Khamenei: Supreme Leader of Iran; killed in US-Israeli strike on February 28, 2026.
- India's condolence: Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri signed condolence book at Iranian Embassy, New Delhi, March 5, 2026.
- EAM Jaishankar: held phone call with Iranian FM Seyed Abbas Araghchi on the same occasion.
- MEA's position: deep concern at conflict's start; call for restraint and dialogue by all sides.
- Chabahar Port: 10-year India-Iran operating agreement (May 2024); India investing $620 million total.
- INSTC: 7,200 km multimodal corridor, India-Russia via Iran; alternative to Suez Canal.
- India-Israel: bilateral trade $7-8 billion; India is a major Israeli arms customer.
- Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri: appointed July 2024; IFS officer, seniormost diplomat in MEA.