Thursday, April 9, 2026

The Runway India Denied Itself: Will India's Kaveri Aero Engine Ambition Outrun Its Dependency?


by Purusharth Arora

On February 16, 2026, the honourable Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visited the Gas Turbine Research Establishment (GTRE), a Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) laboratory in Bangalore, to witness something India had been chasing for over three decades, a full afterburner test of the Kaveri aero engine.

The demonstration confirmed that the engine's redesigned afterburner section could push wet thrust, the increased thrust produced by a method other than standard combustion, augmented for supersonic flight and combat manoeuvres, closer to the performance benchmarks of frontline Western engines.

Earlier versions of Kaveri's afterburner could only reach 73 kilonewtons (kN) of thrust, falling short of the 84 kN delivered by the American GE F404-IN20 engine that currently powers India's own TEJAS MK-1 fleet. That gap, though modest on paper, was enough for India to formally abandon the Kaveri programme and call in foreign help.

The successful test featured a redesigned afterburner module developed in collaboration with BrahMos Aerospace, targeting a peak thrust of 81–83 kN. Yet, as Mr. Singh made clear during his visit, this milestone is not an endpoint but an inflection point.

Calling for a nationwide aero-engine ecosystem and urging immediate investment in next-generation propulsion, including sixth-generation technologies leveraging artificial intelligence, machine learning, and advanced materials, placing the Kaveri’s progress within a larger strategic horizon.

It is, without question, a triumph of persistence. What follows, however, will not be determined by engineering constraints, but by political resolve.

The $55.3 Million Engine

The Kaveri engine programme, launched by GTRE to power the TEJAS, sanctioned in 1989, had an initial budget of $55.3 million (₹382.81 crore). As context, consider what was happening globally that same decade. General Electric (GE) was pouring over a billion dollars into the F404, the engine that would eventually find its way into India's own TEJAS fleet.

The Snecma (now Safran) M88 cost about $1.6 billion to develop and test, while Pratt & Whitney’s F135 was estimated at $1.0 billion in system development and demonstration costs. The Eurojet EJ200 from 1985 to present received a total of around $1.6 billion, and China’s WS-10 Taihang was part of a broader national jet-engine development push that reportedly received 10 billion RMB ($1.4 billion) over five years. India gave GTRE $55.3 million and expected a comparable result.

The consequences were predictable. While the GE F404 was being refined into an engine requiring fewer than two shop visits per thousand flight hours, with a higher bypass ratio for better fuel efficiency and a hundred kilograms less weight than Kaveri while producing equivalent thrust — GTRE was fighting problems it did not have the budget to solve.

GE tested 47 alloy formulations for the F404. Kaveri's initial $2.2 million materials budget allowed just three. In the late 1990s, Kaveri's indigenous turbine blades failed under high operating temperatures. The United States imposed sanctions on India following the Pokhran Nuclear test explosions in 1998. 

This hampered the transfer of critical aero-engine technologies and components from the US and collaboration with Snecma, cutting off access to the single-crystal turbine blade technology that France had already mastered.

Testing infrastructure compounded these failures even further. From the programme's first day, GTRE had no domestic high altitude test facility, no flight test bed, no transonic chamber forcing critical performance tests to Russia's facilities at $12 million per cycle. Every problem caught late in Russia was a problem that should have been caught early at home.

The Tipping Point

The warning signs were visible as early as 1995. The Kabini core module, Kaveri's engine heart, ran its first test nine years into the program, already behind schedule. Flight tests planned for 1999 and TEJAS integration by 2000 both slipped into the future.

By 2004, the pattern had consequences. Repeated turbine blade failures forced component imports from Snecma, with high altitude trials in Russia exposing combustion instability at Mach 0.8. A flaw that domestic transonic facilities would have surfaced years earlier.

Fixing it consumed 14% of Kaveri's entire lifetime budget in a single corrective cycle. Combined with the engine's excessive weight and a thrust ceiling of 73 kN against the required 81–85 kN. In July 2007, facing mounting pressure, GTRE split the program into two tracks — K9+ to prove design concepts through flight trials, and K10 as the final production standard engine through foreign collaboration — an admission that indigenous development alone could not meet the timeline. The conclusion was unavoidable. Kaveri was not ready. The program ran out of runway because India had systematically denied GTRE the conditions under which success was possible.

The Cost of Delays

The 2004 Russian trials were the breaking point. That same year, India signed a $105 million contract with GE for 17 F404-GE-IN20 engines, the highest thrust variant in the F404 family, custom built for the Tejas with Full Authority Digital Engine Control (FADEC) and single-crystal turbine blades India could not manufacture itself.

The pivot, while a compromise and a quiet acknowledgment of Kaveri's failure, proved fortuitous in one sense, enabling the TEJAS to eventually evolve into a 4.5-generation fighter with super cruise potential, Uttam Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, and Astra missiles. The aircraft found its footing, but on someone else's engine.

By 2008, with the Kaveri engine still falling short of required thrust, India took the pragmatic step of de-linking it from the TEJAS program. In parallel, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) moved ahead with orders for 24 imported engines to power the aircraft’s first operational squadron, effectively acknowledging the programme’s limitations.

The Comptroller and Auditor General’s (CAG) 2010–11 report would later underscore the scale of the problem. It revealed that by 2009, only two of six critical milestones had been achieved, with timelines slipping from an initial 1996 target to 2009.

The audit also flagged a staggering 642% cost overrun (₹1,892 crore), an overweight engine (1,235 kg against a target of 1,100 kg), and persistent gaps in core technologies such as the compressor, turbine, and control systems. Taken together, these findings offered a clear institutional verdict of India running out of patience before GTRE had run out of potential.

From the 2000s to 2025, India has spent over $1.9 billion buying F404 (Indian spec) engines from GE, with no technology transfer, no intellectual property rights, no co-development. Kaveri's entire four-decade budget across the same period was just $239 million

India spent eight times more buying the foreign replacement than it ever invested in building their own indigenous engine.

Fall Seven Times, Stand Up Eight

Yet the delinking did not end Kaveri's story. Two years after the formal delinking, Kaveri prototype K9 was successfully flight tested at the Gromov Flight Research Institute in Moscow on November 4, 2010, reaching 6 km altitude at Mach 0.6, with engine control and performance described as excellent. While India deepened its foreign engine dependency, GTRE quietly kept working.

A dry non-afterburning variant, the Kaveri Derivative Engine (KDE), was repurposed to power DRDO's Ghatak, a stealth Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle (UCAV), achieving 49–51 kN in high altitude testing in 2022. In March 2026, the Defence Procurement Board recommended acquiring 60 Ghatak UCAVs, giving the KDE a real production order, not just a deadline.

Meanwhile Godrej Aerospace shifted from delivering modular components to fully assembled engines, a subtle signal that Kaveri's knowledge base was moving from laboratory to factory floor. The BrahMos-redesigned afterburner pushed wet thrust to 81–83 kN, finally closing a gap that had defined the programme's failure for two decades. India's indigenisation drive within GTRE now stands at 85%, targeting 88% by mid-2026. The resilience of the engineers didn't disappear after 2008. They adapted, narrowed their scope, and kept building

New Terms, Old Patterns

The resilience finally begun attracting partners on terms India has never negotiated before. Three foreign engine manufacturers are now competing for India's next-generation engine business. Both France’s Safran and Britain’s Rolls-Royce offered India full ownership of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and 100% technology transfer, enabling true sovereignty and export freedom.

However, United States’ GE, from early 2000s reflected a transactional relationship with only 58% Technology Transfer (ToT) for the F414 engine. The contrast in terms offered by the US and the Europeans is telling.

And yet, that very competition has altered the game. The credibility of the European offers appears to have nudged GE toward a more accommodating stance, culminating in the landmark GE-HAL agreement for co-production of the F414-INS6 engine for the TEJAS MK-2, reportedly involving an 80% transfer of technology.

Safran too secured the agreement to co-develop the engine for India's Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) and transferring core metallurgy and design expertise to local Indian firms, ensuring deep industrial capability.

What makes this moment significant is not merely the signing of contracts, but the larger shift in Indian power. The long timelines for AMCA and Indian Navy's Twin-Engine Deck-Based Fighter (TEDBF) gave India room to negotiate from strength. The Safran deal now awaiting final approval from India's Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), while the GE approved deal now focuses on powering the Tejas program.

Commitment Runs Both Ways

With deals in place, Kaveri’s survival becomes critical as the foundation that makes the Safran partnership meaningful. Technology transfer only works if someone can receive it. GTRE's engineer, the ones who spent decades wrestling with turbine blade failures, combustion instability, and thrust shortfalls are that receiving end.

Their accumulated knowledge, built through failure as much as success, is the institutional memory that allows India to sit across from Safran as a genuine co-developer rather than a passive recipient. If Kaveri is quietly deprioritised now that foreign deals are signed and moving, the engineers who built that preparation would disperse. The Safran deal is only as valuable as GTRE's ability to receive it.

But Safran's history with India invites justified scepticism. The company was penalised for defaulting on offset obligations tied to the Mirage upgrade and Rafale deals, part of a pattern where nearly half of India's offset contracts have faced penalties.

The Ministry of Defence's own assessment described such promises as "over-ambitious." Given this track record, the onus is on Safran to demonstrate through transparent milestones and accountable execution that this partnership is different in practice, not just on paper.

The Question Yet To Be Addressed

India currently operates 29 active fighter squadrons against a sanctioned strength of 42. Until it develops a competitive indigenous turbofan engine, that gap will remain hostage to foreign approvals, diplomatic whims, and supply chain constraints. The record-high 2026–27 DRDO budget and the Safran partnership represent India's most serious attempt yet to address this challenge. But record budgets have existed before: more money is necessary, yet by itself, it has never been sufficient.

GTRE's engineers have proven themselves capable. The key questions this moment raises—whether GTRE will receive serious funding to become a genuine co-developer, and whether Safran's unprecedented offer will differ in practice from its previous commitments—will determine if India's aerospace story enters a new chapter or repeats an old one.

IDN - Views expressed above are the author's own


Shadowing The Strait: China’s Yuan Wang 07 Enters Indian Ocean Ahead of India's Key Missile Test


The Chinese satellite and missile tracking vessel, Yuan Wang 07, is currently advancing through Indonesian waters as it prepares to enter the Indian Ocean Region. Positioned near the Sunda Strait, the ship’s movement has drawn significant attention from regional security analysts and maritime observers, marking another high-profile deployment of China’s specialised "Yuan Wang" fleet into these sensitive waters.

This sophisticated research vessel ("so-called") is operated by the People’s Liberation Army Strategic Support Force and is specifically designed to support transoceanic aerospace observation. Equipped with multiple large-scale parabolic antennae and advanced electronic tracking systems, the ship serves as a mobile command and control station for monitoring satellite launches and the flight paths of intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The timing of the vessel’s entry into the Indian Ocean often coincides with specific space missions or regional military tests, reflecting its role in collecting critical telemetry data that land-based stations cannot reach. Standing at over 220 metres long with a displacement of approximately 25,000 tons, the Yuan Wang 07 is one of China’s most modern and capable platforms, boasting an endurance that allows it to remain at sea for up to 100 days.

Strategic stakeholders in the region, particularly the Indian Navy, maintain a close watch on such movements due to the dual-use nature of the ship’s technology. While Beijing officially classifies these voyages as peaceful scientific research and space support missions, the high-precision sensors on board are capable of monitoring the signals and trajectories of regional missile tests, raising perennial concerns regarding maritime surveillance and intelligence gathering.

The presence of the Yuan Wang 07 is particularly significant as India has recently issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) for a high-profile missile test with a range of 1,550 km, scheduled for mid-April 2026.

Given the historical pattern of Chinese "spy ships" lurking in the Indian Ocean to intercept sensitive telemetry during such trials, Indian defence planners have frequently employed strategic deception to protect sovereign data. By dynamically shifting test windows—either postponing launches or bringing them forward unexpectedly—New Delhi has successfully frustrated Chinese espionage efforts in the past, a tactical cat-and-mouse game that appears set to continue with this latest regional incursion.

As the vessel clears the Sunda Strait, it transitions into the open expanse of the Indian Ocean, a theatre where maritime competition has intensified in recent years. The presence of the Yuan Wang 07 underscores China’s expanding naval reach and its commitment to maintaining a persistent tracking capability far beyond its own shores, ensuring its space and missile programmes have global coverage.

Damien Symon @detresfa_


Iran-US Ceasefire Hits Confusion Roadblock; Middle East Truce Totters As Interpretations Diverge


The fragile two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran is currently faltering due to profound ambiguities regarding its scope and enforcement. While the agreement was intended to pause escalation and provide a narrow window for diplomacy, it has instead exposed deep-seated mistrust and conflicting intents.

Divergent claims concerning Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz, coupled with ongoing military actions, have severely undermined confidence in the truce. As delegations prepare to meet in Islamabad, the widening gap between the written agreement and the reality on the ground suggests a ceasefire that exists primarily on paper while remaining heavily contested in practice.

A fundamental disagreement regarding whether Lebanon was included in the ceasefire framework lies at the heart of the current confusion. Iran has accused Israel of violating the agreement by conducting large-scale strikes in Lebanon that resulted in hundreds of deaths, framing these actions as a direct breach.

Conversely, the United States and Israel maintain that Lebanon was never part of the deal. This disconnect is highlighted by conflicting public statements, with White House Press Secretary Karolina Leavitt asserting that the version of Iran’s 10-point proposal accepted by the US excluded Lebanon, despite multiple drafts being in circulation.

Further complicating the diplomatic landscape, Pakistan’s Prime Minister referenced Lebanon in an official announcement of the ceasefire on social media, and Pakistan’s ambassador to the US explicitly stated in an interview that Lebanon was indeed part of the framework.

These contradictions imply that multiple interpretations may have been tacitly allowed to secure an initial agreement, or that the document itself lacks essential clarity. US Vice President JD Vance acknowledged this confusion but warned Iran that it would be unwise to jeopardise negotiations over Israeli operations in Lebanon, reflecting a US effort to decouple the ceasefire from Israel's parallel military activities.

The reality of military operations continues to erode what little trust exists between the negotiating parties. Even as the ceasefire was meant to take hold, Israel executed its largest strikes on Lebanon in recent months.

For Tehran, these actions reinforce the perception that the ceasefire is being applied selectively. This has led to internal pressure within Iran, with Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf describing the prospect of ongoing negotiations as unreasonable under the current circumstances.

Simultaneously, the United States has signalled its readiness to escalate should diplomacy fail. President Donald Trump stated that all US military assets, including ships, aircraft, and personnel, will remain stationed around Iran until a comprehensive agreement is reached. In a recent statement, he warned that if a deal is not finalised, military action would commence on a scale never before seen. He specifically stipulated that any final agreement must ensure Iran has no nuclear weapons and that the Strait of Hormuz remains open and safe.

The status of the Strait of Hormuz has become a primary point of strategic friction. Although the waterway is critical to global energy flows and was central to the ceasefire talks, its operational status is now uncertain.

Reports suggest Iran has informed mediators of its intent to limit shipping to approximately a dozen vessels per day and impose tolls, using its control of the strait as a negotiating lever. Following the Israeli strikes in Lebanon, shipping through the strait reportedly slowed and then halted entirely, with vessel-tracking data showing no transits at certain intervals.

Energy analysts have expressed significant caution regarding these developments. Experts note that current maritime movements are negligible, describing them as "baby steps" with no clear evidence of resumed crude shipments.

There is a prevailing sentiment that the region remains weeks away from even a partial restoration of normal traffic, as the fragility of the deal makes shipping companies reluctant to risk the passage. The current situation suggests the ceasefire is too flimsy to guarantee the security of global energy routes.

Despite these mounting tensions, diplomatic efforts are proceeding in Islamabad. Facilitated by Pakistan, these talks aim to build upon Iran’s 10-point framework to create a more durable arrangement. 

However, the atmosphere is fraught with scepticism. Iranian officials are wary of negotiating while military actions continue, while US officials are struggling to keep the process alive. International mediators are finding it increasingly difficult to reconcile the differing interpretations of the ceasefire’s regional scope and enforcement.

The choice of Islamabad as a neutral venue has not yet resolved the underlying issues, and Pakistan’s own role has come under scrutiny regarding the Lebanon clause. Ultimately, the latest developments depict a ceasefire that is more procedural than substantive.

The absence of a shared understanding regarding Lebanon, the Strait of Hormuz, and the limits of military activity has made enforcement nearly impossible. While ambiguity may have allowed for an initial pause, it now threatens to collapse the entire diplomatic effort as violations become a matter of subjective interpretation.

Agencies


Pakistan: Neutral Peacemaker Or America’s ‘Honourable Exit’ Facilitator?


by Nilesh Kunwar

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif would be really proud of himself-and he has all the reasons to be so. After all, by successfully stopping US President Donald Trump from bombing Iran “back to the stone ages,” didn't he single handedly achieve what the UN Secretary General and many influential world leaders couldn’t?

But that’s not all-the icing on the cake is that Sharif could get the otherwise inordinately stubborn POTUS to almost immediately accept his suggestion of extending the US deadline for Iran’s slated destruction by two weeks “to allow diplomacy to run its course.”

While Pakistan may be revelling in its new found role as an effective international peacemaker capable of bringing two extremely hostile warring sides to the negotiating table, a shoddy ‘cut and paste’ job by the Prime Minister’s Office has revealed that rather than being a negotiator, Islamabad was all along acting as Washington’s mouthpiece.

Sharif’s original post on X calling for the two-week ceasefire mentioned “*Draft-Pakistan’s PM Message on X*.” As it didn’t make any sense, this curious remark immediately [and rightly] caught public attention. Sharif’s supporters would obviously maintain that as the prime minister is a busy person, his official posts on X are compiled by the PMO and after being approved by him posted on social media.

While this explanation does make sense, the question that arises is- why did the PMO address Sharif as “Pakistan’s PM” and not simply the PM? Moreover, even if one assumes that the PMO refers to the PM of the country as “Pakistan’s PM” in its internal official correspondence, and putting up drafts for approval is a routine affair, why the person who put this post on social media didn’t delete the mention of it being a draft?

Lastly, if it was merely an inadvertent error, why was this post edited and reposted with the draft portion expunged?

In retrospect, it appears that the text of post on X ascribed to Sharif could well have been authored by the US as a face-saving device and the draft sent to Islamabad with the directions that it should be posted on social media by “Pakistan’s PM.”

The fact that this post appeared just hours before Trump’s threat to bomb Iran “into the stone ages” deadline was to expire and in wake of his menacing warning that a “whole civilization will die tonight” is definitely not a mere coincidence.

Similarly, Trump [who otherwise appeared to be in a tearing hurry to wreak havoc on Iran], promptly accepting the two-week long window for giving diplomacy a chance suggestion within hours of Sharif’s post appearing on X is a clear indication that this entire episode was nothing but a ‘fixed match’ to help POTUS wriggle out of an embarrassing situation.

Trump displayed extraordinary belligerence and brazen disregard for international laws and conventions on warfare by threatening to destroy every bridge and power plant in Iran within just four hours. However, by constantly shifting the goals and timelines of his Iran offensive Trump exposed his weak moorings and having knowingly pushed himself into an irretrievable situation, a desperate Trump sought an honourable exit.

It was Sharif who saved the day by using social media to post exactly what the US President desired, making it known to all that it was sent across by him. But, as nothing pleases Trump more than seeing heads of states and other key dignitaries displaying their subservience to him, Sharif’s post cemented his role as a faithful underling and provided POTUS an excellent ego-massage. So, while his unedited post on X is definitely discomforting, this faux pas is possibly a boon in disguise.

Trump’s war management skills may be suspect but his ability to further his political ambitions by identifying and wooing minions is indeed remarkable. Readers would recall that he ushered 2018 by tweeting “The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools. They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan…”

Fast forward to the present and we find that Trump’s views have undergone a sea change and his infatuation with Pakistan seems to transcend all boundaries. He thinks Sharif and army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir are “great people,” and despite a 2026 US Congressional Research Service document identifying “Pakistan as a base of operations and/or target for numerous armed, non-state militant groups,” Trump still feels that this country is “doing terrifically well.”

With Sharif calling Trump a “man of peace” and supporting him for the Nobel Peace Prize and Pakistan’s Chief of Defence Forces Field Marshal Asim Munir’s confidential interaction with POTUS during his White House luncheon after which Trump started calling him his “favourite field marshal,” Pakistan is back in Washington’s lap.

But how long this honeymoon lasts and what good it does to Pakistan remains a million dollar question- remember former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s incisive observation- “It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be America’s friend is fatal”!

Nilesh Kunwar is a retired Indian Army Officer who has served in Jammu & Kashmir, Assam, Nagaland and Manipur. He is a keen ‘Kashmir-Watcher,’ and after retirement is pursuing his favourite hobby of writing for newspapers, journals and think-tanks. Views expressed above are the author's own


The Strategic Imperative Behind Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri’s Qatar Mission


Union Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Hardeep Singh Puri has commenced a crucial two-day diplomatic visit to Qatar against a backdrop of escalating regional instability and severe threats to global energy security.

This visit is primarily motivated by the urgent need to address vulnerabilities in India’s energy supply chain, which have been exacerbated by the ongoing conflict involving Iran. As one of the world’s leading energy consumers, India finds itself in a precarious position due to its heavy reliance on external sources for liquefied natural gas.

According to oil economist Kirit Parikh, India currently procures approximately 50 per cent of its total LNG requirements from the international market. Within this portion, Qatar serves as a foundational partner, providing nearly 40 per cent of those imports.

This vital supply line has been compromised recently as the Qatari government was forced to shutter major production plants. Furthermore, the persistent disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime artery for global energy transit, has further strangled the flow of gas to the Indian subcontinent.

The physical impact of the conflict on Qatar’s energy infrastructure has been devastating. Since late February, Iranian strikes have targeted key facilities, damaging nearly 17 per cent of the nation’s total LNG export capacity.

Detailed reports from QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi indicate that the attacks hit two of the country’s fourteen LNG trains and one of its two gas-to-liquids facilities. These strikes have effectively removed an estimated 12.8 million tonnes of annual output from the global market.

The long-term outlook for recovery remains challenging, as experts suggest that the necessary repairs to these sophisticated facilities could span between three and five years. Economically, the disruption is projected to cost Qatar approximately $20 billion in annual revenue losses.

This shortfall has sent shockwaves through the international community, raising significant alarms regarding energy stability for major importers across both Europe and Asia who depend on Middle Eastern gas.

In response to these regional bottlenecks, the Indian government has proactively sought to diversify its procurement strategy. New Delhi has reportedly begun large-scale imports of natural gas through alternative markets and shipping routes.

These efforts are focused on securing LNG from the United States, Australia, and Russia to mitigate the impact of the Middle Eastern crisis. Minister Puri is expected to use his time in Qatar to engage in high-level discussions specifically aimed at stabilizing and renegotiating LNG supply commitments.

The conflict has also cast a shadow over India’s domestic Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) supply, particularly after Iran restricted passage through the Strait of Hormuz. This chokepoint is responsible for carrying roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply, making its closure a significant threat to price stability and availability. Despite these external pressures, the Ministry of Petroleum has issued reassurances that the domestic LPG cylinder network continues to operate within normal parameters.

To combat potential shortages and prevent the illegal diversion of fuel, the ministry has observed a significant shift in consumer behaviour and administrative oversight. Online LPG bookings have surged by approximately 95 per cent, while the use of Delivery Authentication Code (DAC)-based deliveries has risen by 91 per cent.

These digital measures are designed to ensure that the fuel reaches the intended households. Recent data confirms that over 5.35 million domestic LPG cylinders were successfully delivered on a single day in early April, suggesting a resilient distribution chain.

Parallel to Minister Puri’s mission, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar is scheduled for a multi-nation tour that includes Mauritius and the United Arab Emirates. This marks the first visit to the UAE by an Indian minister since the outbreak of the Iran war.

While Jaishankar will attend the Indian Ocean Conference in Mauritius, his subsequent stop in the UAE will place energy security at the absolute forefront of the diplomatic agenda, highlighting India’s coordinated "energy diplomacy" approach.

These diplomatic efforts are unfolding during a period of extreme volatility. Although a temporary two-week ceasefire was recently brokered between the United States and Iran—with President Donald Trump describing Tehran’s conditions as "workable"—the situation on the ground remains fragile. 

Strikes have reportedly continued despite the agreement, and maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remains severely restricted, keeping the pressure on Indian negotiators to secure long-term energy guarantees.

Agencies


Tehran Stands Firm: Nuclear Enrichment 'Non-Negotiable' Despite Ceasefire Talks


Iran has decisively ruled out any negotiations regarding its nuclear enrichment program, with state officials asserting that the nation’s right to enrichment remains non-negotiable.

This firm stance comes via reports from the Iranian state news agency, ISNA, even as the country navigates complex efforts to end hostilities across West Asia involving the United States and Israel.

Mohammad Eslami, the Vice President for Nuclear Affairs and head of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran, emphasised that external pressures from Washington and Tel Aviv to curb these activities would fail. He stated clearly that the Islamic Republic views its enrichment rights as an absolute sovereign prerogative that cannot be bartered away.

Eslami further contended that no external authority or legal framework possesses the power to obstruct Iran’s nuclear path. He described the demands of "enemies" to limit enrichment as unrealistic "pipe dreams," suggesting that these expectations would never be realised.

These developments are unfolding against the backdrop of a fragile, two-week ceasefire intended to pause the conflict between Iran and the US-Israel coalition. High-stakes negotiations are currently scheduled to take place in Islamabad, where parties aim to establish a comprehensive and lasting resolution to the regional hostilities.

A central point of friction remains the position of US President Donald Trump, who has pushed for Tehran to completely dismantle its nuclear programme, including all uranium enrichment. While Iran has firmly rejected this, the President has offered a different narrative regarding the progress of the talks.

On Wednesday, President Trump claimed that the Islamic Republic had already agreed to halt its uranium enrichment as part of a broader deal. He also noted that discussions are currently underway regarding the potential for tariff and sanctions relief for Iran in exchange for compliance.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump expressed a willingness for the United States to work closely with Iran, following what he characterised as a "very productive Regime Change" within the country. He suggested that the transition has opened a new chapter for bilateral cooperation.

The President’s post further detailed plans for the US to collaborate with Iran to "dig up and remove" nuclear material from deeply buried sites, referencing the use of B-2 bombers in previous strikes. He noted that these locations have remained under "exacting Satellite Surveillance" by the Space Force and have been untouched since the date of the attack.

Trump indicated that significant progress has already been made on a broader 15-point agreement, suggesting that many aspects have been finalised. However, the stark contrast between Eslami’s public defiance and Trump’s claims of an agreement highlights the immense tension surrounding the upcoming Islamabad summit.

ANI


New Strategic Frontier: 'India-US: Plenty To Offer Each Other,' US Embassy Shares Vance Quote


The United States Embassy in India recently highlighted a significant statement from US Vice President JD Vance, emphasizing the symbiotic potential between the two nations. Reflecting on his April 2025 visit to India, Vance remarked that both countries have a wealth of resources to offer one another.

He specifically pointed to the synergy between American prowess in artificial intelligence hardware and India’s vibrant technological ecosystem.

Vance described the American hardware sector as the leading AI infrastructure globally, while simultaneously praising India for possessing one of the most exciting start-up technology infrastructures found anywhere in the world. This mutual exchange of innovation and physical infrastructure serves as a cornerstone for the deepening bilateral relationship.

Adding to this diplomatic momentum, the US Ambassador to India, Sergio Gor, recently attended a dinner at the White House. During this event, he engaged in direct discussions with President Donald Trump regarding the strength and future trajectory of ties between New Delhi and Washington. Gor described the evening as memorable, noting that history was unfolding in real time during their conversation.

Ambassador Gor lauded President Trump’s unwavering determination to ensure global stability and reflected on the historic achievements of the presidency. The discussions underscored a shared commitment to maintaining a robust partnership that benefits both the American and Indian populations.

Earlier on the same day, Ambassador Gor held a productive meeting with the US Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick. Their talks focused specifically on the US-India commercial roadmap, with a particular emphasis on practical cooperation in emerging sectors. A key highlight was the discussion of a new Memorandum of Understanding designed to bridge India’s AI scale with the American AI ecosystem.

Furthermore, the meeting addressed increasing Indian participation in the upcoming SelectUSA Summit. The two officials also explored ways to encourage growing Indian pharmaceutical investment within the United States. This move is intended to foster greater market competition and strengthen global supply chains, ensuring more resilient healthcare and technology sectors for both nations.

ANI


Strategic Momentum Builds As Washington Prepares For Crucial India-US Trade Negotiations


The United States has officially confirmed that it will host an Indian delegation in Washington, DC, later this month. This move signals a significant fresh push in bilateral commercial ties as both nations focus on finalising a proposed trade pact.

The announcement was made following high-level discussions between Ambassador Sergio Gor and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Reporting on their encounter via the social media platform X, Gor described the meeting with Ambassador Greer as highly productive, focusing on the advancement of presidential trade priorities within South and Central Asia.

Ambassador Gor further emphasised the continuity of these ongoing negotiations. He noted that the United States and India have previously reached an agreement on a trade deal and expressed a keen interest in welcoming the Indian delegation to the capital later this month to build upon that foundation.

This diplomatic activity is coinciding with a three-day official visit to the United States by India’s Foreign Secretary, Vikram Misri. During his stay, the Foreign Secretary is meeting with senior American officials to evaluate the current state of bilateral relations, with a particular focus on trade, defence, and critical technology.

The Ministry of External Affairs has stated that the primary objective of this trip is the strengthening of strategic ties. The ministry noted that the visit provides a vital opportunity to review the full spectrum of the India-US partnership and to advance cooperation across several key areas of mutual interest.

India’s Ambassador to the US, Vinay Mohan Kwatra, echoed these sentiments, remarking that the Foreign Secretary’s presence allows for a comprehensive review of the bilateral relationship. He highlighted that the visit aims to advance discussions across the main pillars of the agenda, including technology and regional developments.

These high-level discussions are occurring against a rapidly shifting geopolitical backdrop. Notably, the talks come just hours after the United States and Iran reached a conditional 14-day ceasefire, an agreement that includes the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

The reopening of this critical maritime passage is expected to have a profound impact on international shipping and global energy markets. This regional stability provides a unique context for the upcoming economic discussions between the two democratic powers.

On the economic front, the scheduled Washington talks follow recent interactions between India’s Commerce and Industry Minister, Piyush Goyal, and USTR Jamieson Greer. The two met on the sidelines of the WTO ministerial meeting in Yaounde to explore the next steps in the India-US Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).

While both nations announced in February that they had successfully finalised a framework for the first phase of the trade agreement, the document has not yet been signed. Consequently, the visit of the upcoming delegation is seen as a critical step towards reaching a formal conclusion.

The Ministry of External Affairs highlighted that Foreign Secretary Misri’s visit is a direct continuation of the momentum established by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar during his trip to Washington in February. This underscores the consistent, high-level engagement currently defining the strategic partnership between India and the United States.

ANI


China-Mediated Pakistan-Afghanistan Talks Ends In Failure In Urumqi


A week-long series of diplomatic discussions mediated by China between Pakistan and Afghanistan has concluded in Urumqi without the parties reaching a formal agreement to end ongoing hostilities.

Beijing has maintained a cautious optimism, stating that both Islamabad and Kabul have nonetheless agreed to explore a "comprehensive solution" to resolve their deep-seated differences.

The informal talks took place from 1 April to 7 April in the provincial capital of China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. According to Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning, the sessions involved representatives from all three nations and were conducted in what she described as a candid and pragmatic atmosphere.

This Urumqi process represents the first significant diplomatic engagement between the two neighbours since the end of February, when Pakistan initiated Operation Ghazab lil-Haq. That military campaign was launched to target what Islamabad claims are terrorist sanctuaries within Afghan territory.

Pakistan has consistently accused the Taliban-led administration in Afghanistan of providing shelter to militants from the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). Islamabad asserts that these groups use Afghan soil to coordinate an insurgency and conduct recurring attacks across various Pakistani provinces.

During the briefings, Mao Ning emphasised that the three sides followed an approach that was problem-focused and action-driven. The participants reiterated that dialogue remains the only viable method for resolving complex international disputes, specifically the friction currently defining Pakistan-Afghanistan relations.

The parties have reportedly agreed to identify core and priority concerns as they search for a broader resolution. While China acknowledged that terrorism remains the central issue affecting the bilateral relationship, Mao Ning notably stopped short of explicitly endorsing Pakistan’s specific allegations regarding the sheltering of militant groups.

When questioned about future engagements, the spokesperson suggested that maintaining contact is a vital consensus reached during the week. She indicated that the Urumqi process is considered meaningful and that further communication at various levels is expected in the coming months.

The diplomatic impasse comes in the wake of a recent report from United Nations experts who urged both nations to commit to a permanent ceasefire. The UN highlighted that Pakistan has yet to publish credible evidence proving that TTP attacks on its soil are directly controlled or directed by the de facto Afghan authorities.

Furthermore, the report from the UN Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner raised legal concerns regarding the recent escalations. It suggested that Pakistan’s military actions within Afghanistan constitute a violation of international law and the prohibition on the use of force as outlined under Article 2 of the United Nations Charter.

Agencies


Peace Truce Or Not; Israeli Defence Forces Are Pounding Lebanon, Killing 250 In Deadliest Day of War


Israel has executed its most devastating aerial bombardment of Lebanon since the current conflict with Hezbollah commenced last month, resulting in the deaths of more than 250 individuals on Wednesday. 

This surge in violence occurred as the Iran-backed group resumed its rocket fire into northern Israel, breaking a brief hiatus that had been observed under the two-week ceasefire agreement between the United States and Iran.

The intensity of these strikes has cast significant doubt on the viability of regional diplomatic efforts. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian emphasised that a ceasefire within Lebanon was a fundamental prerequisite for his country’s ongoing agreement with the United States.

Despite these diplomatic sensitivities, the Israeli military confirmed it had initiated its largest coordinated strike of the war to date.

During a single ten-minute window on Wednesday afternoon, at least five consecutive strikes shook the capital city of Beirut, sending massive columns of smoke into the skyline. The Israeli military stated that it had successfully targeted over 100 Hezbollah command centres and military installations across Beirut, the Bekaa Valley, and southern Lebanon.

The human cost of the day’s operations has been catastrophic, with Lebanon’s civil defence service reporting a total of 254 fatalities and more than 1,100 injuries nationwide. The highest concentration of casualties was recorded in Beirut, where 91 people lost their lives. While the health ministry initially provided a lower figure of 182 dead, they cautioned that the toll remained provisional and was expected to rise.

Early on Thursday, Hezbollah claimed responsibility for firing rockets at the kibbutz of Manara, justifying the move as a response to what it termed Israeli violations of the existing ceasefire. In a defiant statement, the group declared that its military actions would persist until the "Israeli-American aggression" against the Lebanese people and their country was brought to a halt.

This development marks the deadliest single day since the war erupted on 2 March. The conflict began when Hezbollah launched attacks on Israel in a show of support for Tehran, following a joint U.S.-Israeli strike on Iran two days prior. In the weeks since, Israel has maintained a comprehensive air and ground campaign in retaliation.

On the ground in Beirut, the scale of the devastation was visible as rescue workers struggled to reach survivors. Reuters witnesses observed civil defence personnel using a crane to evacuate an elderly woman from a western Beirut building that had been partially sheared off by a strike, leaving residents on the upper storeys stranded.

The local medical infrastructure has been pushed to a breaking point. In the immediate aftermath of the strikes, many of the wounded were transported to hospitals on motorcycles due to a severe shortage of available ambulances. One of the largest medical facilities in the capital has issued an urgent appeal for blood donations of all types to manage the influx of patients.

The international community has reacted with alarm to the rapid escalation of hostilities. UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk described the scale of destruction and loss of life as "horrific," noting that such carnage occurring so soon after the U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement was established "defies belief."

AP


New Delhi And Ankara Strengthen Strategic And Economic Cooperation


India and Turkiye recently convened the 12th round of Foreign Office Consultations in New Delhi, marking a significant step in the ongoing diplomatic dialogue between the two nations.

This high-level meeting took place on Wednesday, providing a formal platform for both countries to conduct a comprehensive and detailed review of the current state of their bilateral relations.

The session was co-chaired by Sibi George, Secretary (West) representing the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, and Berris Ekinci, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs from the Turkish side. This meeting was particularly noteworthy as it followed a nearly four-year interval since the previous round of consultations, which was hosted in Ankara in June 2022.

According to an official statement released by the Ministry of External Affairs, the discussions were wide-ranging and focused on several key pillars of cooperation. Both delegations explored opportunities to enhance trade and investments, while also looking at ways to bolster tourism and foster greater collaboration in the fields of technology and innovation.

Energy security and cooperation in educational and cultural sectors were also high on the agenda, reflecting a mutual desire to deepen the social and intellectual ties between the two populations. A significant portion of the dialogue was dedicated to strengthening people-to-people connections, which serve as the foundation for long-term diplomatic stability.

A critical component of the consultations involved a firm commitment to the fight against cross-border terrorism, an issue of paramount importance to both New Delhi and Ankara. The two sides shared their concerns and strategies regarding security challenges that affect regional stability.

Beyond bilateral matters, the officials exchanged perspectives on a variety of regional and global issues of mutual interest, acknowledging the complex geopolitical landscape of 2026. The meeting concluded on a positive note, with both parties agreeing to schedule the 13th round of Foreign Office Consultations in Turkiye at a date that is mutually convenient for both governments.

ANI


Israel Defence Forces Eliminates Nephew And Personal Aide of Hezbollah Terror Group Leader Naim Qassem In Beirut Strike

Lebanon's Hezbollah terror group chief Naim Qassem

The Israeli military has confirmed the targeted elimination of a high-ranking Hezbollah figure who served in a dual capacity as both the personal secretary and the nephew of the terror group’s Secretary-General, Naim Qassem.

The operation took place during an overnight strike on the Lebanese capital, Beirut, as part of Israel's ongoing campaign against the Iran-backed organisation.

The individual, identified by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) as Ali Yusuf Harshi, was located within Hezbollah’s inner leadership circle. His death marks a significant strike against the personal staff of the group's top commander, occurring at a time when regional hostilities between Israel and various Iranian proxies continue to escalate sharply.

According to official statements released by the IDF on Thursday, the air strike specifically focused on the Beirut area with the intent of dismantling key components of Hezbollah's command structure. By removing Harshi, the Israeli military aims to further disrupt the operational and administrative functions surrounding Naim Qassem himself.

The strike is the latest in a series of intensifying exchanges that have defined the Israel-Iran conflict. As Hezbollah continues to receive backing from Tehran, Israel remains focused on targeting high-value individuals within the Lebanese group's hierarchy to weaken their strategic capabilities and leadership continuity.

Reuters


Pakistani National Pleads Guilty To Plotting Mass Shooting At Brooklyn Jewish Centre On October 7th Anniversary


Muhammad Shahzeb Khan, a 21-year-old Pakistani national residing in Canada on a study permit, has pleaded guilty in a New York court to attempting to execute a mass shooting at a Jewish centre in Brooklyn.

Also known as Shahzeb Jadoon, Khan entered his plea before US District Judge Paul G Gardephe on Wednesday. He is currently scheduled to face sentencing on 12 August 2026 for his role in the planned terrorism plot.

The United States Department of Justice revealed that Khan’s explicit goal was to murder as many Jewish people as possible. He specifically timed the intended massacre to coincide with the anniversary of the October 7th Hamas attacks. Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A Eisenberg stated that Khan viewed New York City as the "perfect" venue for his assault due to its significant Jewish population.

In communications regarding the plot, Khan boasted that his actions would result in the deadliest attack on American soil since the events of 11 September 2001. His radicalisation reportedly became evident around November 2023, when he began distributing ISIS propaganda videos and literature via social media. These activities eventually escalated into the active planning of a domestic terrorist attack in support of the group.

Unbeknownst to Khan, his primary confidants during the planning stages were actually two undercover officers. Khan shared his detailed intentions with these officers, including his plan to carry out the attack alongside an associate.

He requested that the undercover agents procure AR-style assault rifles, ammunition, and other tactical materials necessary to facilitate the massacre.

Initially focusing on a different city, Khan shifted his target to a prominent Jewish religious centre in Brooklyn in August 2024. He provided the undercover officers with specific locations for the hit and claimed he had access to a smuggler who could assist him in crossing the border from Canada into the United States. He reiterated his belief that the success of this plan would constitute a historic level of carnage.

Following his guilty plea, Khan now faces a maximum penalty of life in prison. The National Security Division has reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring that individuals attempting to carry out such acts of terror face the full weight of American law. The case highlights the ongoing vigilance of federal authorities in monitoring and disrupting extremist plots targeting religious communities.

ANI


Ambassador Mittal Appreciates UAE’s Enduring Support For The Indian Diaspora


Deepak Mittal, the Indian Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, recently held a high-level meeting with Saif Saeed Ghobash, the Secretary General of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, to discuss the further strengthening of the partnership between New Delhi and Abu Dhabi.

During this engagement, as detailed by the Indian Embassy in Abu Dhabi on the social media platform X, Ambassador Mittal formally conveyed his appreciation to the UAE leadership for their steadfast care and continuous support provided to the Indian community residing within the Emirates.

The discussions between Ambassador Mittal and Secretary General Ghobash also involved a productive exchange of views regarding the deepening of bilateral cooperation across various sectors.

In a related diplomatic development in New Delhi, the Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson, Randhir Jaiswal, noted that Sripriya Ranganathan, Secretary (CPV&OIA), hosted an interaction on Tuesday with the Heads of Missions from the Gulf Cooperation Council.

This particular gathering featured Prof. (Dr.) Bimal N. Patel as a special guest. Dr Patel is currently India’s candidate for the position of Judge at the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) for the 2026–2035 term.

This follows a significant working visit to New Delhi in March by the UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation, Reem Al Hashimy, who engaged in critical talks with External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri.

Those earlier discussions were primarily focused on bolstering the binational partnership while simultaneously addressing the rise of regional tensions. According to the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the officials specifically reviewed the repercussions of Iranian missile attacks on regional security and stability.

The UAE representatives highlighted that such attacks have a tangible impact on the global economy and energy security. Minister Reem Al Hashimy condemned the "treacherous attacks" against the UAE and other regional nations, labelling them a grave violation of international law, the UN Charter, and international humanitarian law.

She further characterised these actions as a direct infringement on state sovereignty and a significant threat to regional security. Amidst these regional concerns, India continues to expand its global diplomatic reach.

On Wednesday, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar met with Dag Hartelius, the State Secretary for Foreign Affairs of Sweden. Their conversation focused on advancing bilateral cooperation and further deepening the Strategic Partnership between India and the European Union.

ANI


A Fragile Peace: In The Scramble To Save US-Iran Ceasefire, EU's Kaja Kallas Says It Must Cover Lebanon


The European Union's foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, has issued a formal call for the existing regional truce to be significantly expanded. She asserted that the ceasefire agreement currently held between the United States and Iran must be extended to include Lebanon to ensure its survival.

In her address regarding the escalating Middle East crisis, Kallas underscored the urgent need for de-escalation while simultaneously demanding that the Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah disarm.

Offering a firm critique of the ongoing hostilities, the EU’s top diplomat noted that while Hezbollah was responsible for dragging Lebanon into the conflict, Israel’s right to self-defence does not provide a justification for inflicting such massive destruction.

Kallas expressed deep concern over the durability of current diplomatic efforts, warning that continued Israeli military actions are placing the US-Iran ceasefire under severe strain. To preserve regional stability, she insisted that the truce must encompass Lebanese territory.

These remarks were made against a backdrop of intensifying military operations. Referencing the high human cost of recent escalations, Kallas pointed out that Israeli strikes killed hundreds in a single night. She argued that such heavy-handed actions make it difficult to maintain the position that these operations fall strictly within the boundaries of self-defence.

The fragile regional stability is further compromised by Israel’s ongoing operations in Lebanon, which have led Iran to accuse the US-Israeli side of violating the temporary agreement. In a sharp diplomatic escalation, Tehran has threatened to withdraw from the high-level negotiations scheduled to take place in Islamabad this weekend.

The Iranian delegation is set to be led by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who has explicitly accused Israel of violating three key clauses of the 10-point proposal that established the ceasefire.

Ghalibaf stated that the deep historical distrust Iran holds toward the United States is rooted in repeated violations of commitments, a pattern he believes is being repeated. He identified the first major breach as non-compliance with the first clause regarding a ceasefire in Lebanon. This commitment, according to Ghalibaf, was one that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had declared would be an immediate ceasefire in all regions, effective immediately.

The Speaker further cited the destruction of an intruding drone in the Iranian city of Lar, Fars Province, as a clear violation of the clause prohibiting airspace incursions. Additionally, he accused the opposing side of violating the sixth clause of the agreement by denying Iran’s right to uranium enrichment. Ghalibaf argued that proceeding with bilateral negotiations is unreasonable when core clauses have been breached before formal talks have even begun.

In contrast, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu remains defiant, maintaining that the Lebanese theatre was never part of the original deal. He insisted that he had specifically demanded the temporary ceasefire with Iran exclude Hezbollah, allowing Israel to continue striking the group forcefully. Netanyahu highlighted the scale of recent operations, claiming Israel dealt Hezbollah its greatest blow since the pager incidents by attacking 100 targets in 10 minutes.

The Israeli Prime Minister emphasised that these strikes hit locations the group previously considered immune. His primary focus remains prohibiting Iran from enriching uranium for a potential nuclear weapon, an objective he is determined to achieve through either negotiation or a resumption of hostilities. Netanyahu warned that Israel is prepared to return to combat at any moment, describing the ceasefire not as a finality but as a milestone toward achieving all national goals.

Despite these significant frictions, direct talks between the US and Iran are still slated for Islamabad this weekend to end weeks of intense hostilities. This upcoming summit follows a two-week immediate ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran. The United States delegation will be led by Vice President JD Vance, while Speaker Ghalibaf is still scheduled to represent the Iranian side.

ANI