Israeli Envoy: Iran Threats Endanger 10 Million Indians in Gulf, Key Projects

Israeli Ambassador Reuven Azar states that high-level dialogue is ongoing between India and Israel regarding regional security operations. He warns that threats from Iran jeopardize the stability of the Gulf region and the lives of nearly 10 million Indian expatriates living there. The envoy directly links regional security to the success of major economic projects like the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC). He emphasizes that investor confidence and long-term connectivity plans require a solid foundation of political and security stability, currently undermined by disruptive forces.

Key Points: Iran Threats Risk Gulf Indians, Projects: Israeli Envoy

  • High-level India-Israel talks on West Asia ops
  • Iran's threats risk Gulf stability & Indian expats
  • Security key for IMEC economic corridor
  • Investor confidence tied to regional peace
3 min read

"Threats from Iran would undermine lives of 10 million Indians in Gulf": Israeli envoy Reuven Azar

Israeli Ambassador Reuven Azar warns Iran's threats undermine safety of 10 million Indians in Gulf & viability of key economic corridors like IMEC.

"that plan would undermine the stability of the region and would undermine the lives of 10 million Indians that are living in the Gulf region - Reuven Azar"

By Ayushi Agarwal, New Delhi, March 24

Highlighting the strategic depth of the ongoing bilateral dialogue, Ambassador of Israel to India, Reuven Azar, has underscored that both nations are maintaining high-level communication regarding the current regional operations. Azar noted that Israel remains committed to ensuring India is fully briefed on the security dynamics shifting across West Asia.

In an interview with ANI, Ambassador Azar detailed the frequency of these diplomatic exchanges.

"We have been having conversations at the top level, both of our Prime Minister and our Minister of Foreign Affairs. They have been updating the Indian government on the aims of this operation and about the situation of the operation. I'm sure that India is doing whatever it needs in order to meet its own interests," he stated.

The Ambassador pointed out that the neutralisation of specific regional threats is a prerequisite for safeguarding the millions of Indian expatriates contributing to the Gulf economy.

"But the bottom line from our perspective is that once we have achieved the removal of these terrible threats that were looming over West Asia from Iran, a radical Islamic theocratic country that was pursuing a nuclear arsenal and also building thousands of ballistic missiles and hundreds of thousands of drones, that plan would undermine the stability of the region and would undermine the lives of 10 million Indians that are living in the Gulf region," Azar remarked.

Beyond immediate safety concerns, the envoy linked the success of these operations to the viability of long-term economic visions, such as the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), which aims to turn the region into a global investment hub.

He explained, "More importantly, they would undermine the great plans that we all have together with India to make West Asia an area that is attractive for investment, that is stable, and that can actually engage in projects of connectivity, especially since India has signed so many trade agreements that are going to increase the number of transactions and of merchandise that is going to move east and west. I think that there's a lot to gain from the change in conduct of this regime."

Addressing the feasibility of the IMEC specifically, Azar was candid about the necessity of a stable security environment before such grand connectivity projects can fully materialise.

"Any economic project has to lie on very solid security foundations and political foundations. Once we are able to solve this situation in which the area is so threatened by a radical regime, we will have consolidated the security regime that we need in order to have a solid security foundation. Then it will be much easier to get into political agreement, and then the economic dimension will come very fast," the Ambassador stated.

Azar further warned that economic progress cannot exist in a vacuum while "disruptive forces" remain active, emphasising that investor confidence is directly tied to regional peace.

"We cannot fantasise that in an area that is constantly threatened by disruptive and malign forces like the Iranian regime that is invading other Arab countries and is trying to destroy a country in the region like Israel, that under those circumstances, we will be able to do economic projects, because investors will not come to a region that is threatened in such a way," he added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
While security is crucial, the envoy's language seems overly one-sided. India has strong, historic ties with several Gulf nations and Iran. Our foreign policy should focus on de-escalation and dialogue, not taking sides. IMEC is a dream project for all of us, and peace is the only foundation.
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Aman W
He's right about the connection between security and big projects like IMEC. No company will invest billions if there's a chance of conflict. Hope our government's talks with all sides help calm things down. Our diaspora's safety and these economic corridors are too important to lose.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see the direct link made between Israel's security operations and Indian interests abroad. It's a complex geopolitical web. India's balancing act is more critical than ever.
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Vikram M
The core issue is our people's safety. My cousin works in Dubai. Every time tensions rise, our family worries. India must use its good relations with everyone—Israel, Arab states, AND Iran—to be a force for stability. Jai Hind.
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Karthik V
The ambassador is making a sensible point, even if it's from his national viewpoint. Without basic security, all these grand corridor plans will remain on paper. Hope our leadership's "multi-alignment" policy actually delivers peace and protects Indian lives and jobs overseas.

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