Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
24MAY

Araghchi tells Jaishankar Iran guides Indian ships

4 min read
14:49UTC

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Indian counterpart S. Jaishankar in New Delhi on Friday that roughly 13 Indian-flagged vessels are queued for Hormuz transit while Iranian military personnel guide cleared ships through mine zones.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran has folded India into its guided-passage system and opened talks with Oman, the Strait's UNCLOS co-administrator.

Abbas Araghchi, Iran's Foreign Minister, told Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar on Friday 15 May in New Delhi that Iran has "been guiding Indian vessels to pass" through the Strait of Hormuz, with roughly 13 Indian-flagged ships still awaiting transit and clearance requiring coordination with Iranian military "because of the mines and obstacles" 1. Araghchi separately disclosed that Iran and Oman are "consulting on future arrangements to guarantee maritime security", without a signed text. The two ministers met on the sidelines of the BRICS foreign ministers' meeting; Araghchi had confirmed his Delhi attendance and BRICS role on 12 May .

India's quiet entry extends Iran's bilateral passage doctrine, already operating for Iraq, Pakistan and Qatari LNG , to a fourth named state. Thirteen Indian-flagged ships waiting at an undeclared Iranian queue translates, at Indian crude import volumes, to roughly ten days of delayed deliveries to west-coast refineries, yet Delhi has registered no public protest. The arithmetic matters: India is the third-largest oil importer in the world and operates the Reliance Jamnagar complex, the planet's biggest single refinery cluster, on Persian Gulf crude.

Oman co-administers the strait under UNCLOS through the shared boundary north of the Musandam Peninsula, which makes the Muscat track the structurally larger signal of the day. If Muscat enters a Tehran framework on "future arrangements", Iran acquires the co-administrator's endorsement of its selective-passage architecture, undercutting the legal foundation of the Western maritime mission anchored in UNCLOS transit-passage rights . Araghchi flew to Delhi aboard the aircraft Iran has named Minab168 for 168 schoolgirls killed at Minab, a Hormuz-coast town : the fuselage carried the Hormuz grievance into the bloc meeting where Hormuz conduct was the blocking issue.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's Foreign Minister met his Indian counterpart on 15 May and revealed that roughly 13 Indian ships are stuck waiting to sail through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the open ocean. Iranian military personnel are physically guiding ships through areas where Iran has placed mines. India has quietly allowed this arrangement without any written deal. Separately, Araghchi said Iran and Oman, which controls the southern half of the strait under international rules, are talking about a formal arrangement for managing ship passage. If Oman co-signs Iran's system, it becomes much harder for Western navies to argue the arrangement is illegal.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

India's structural dependence on Hormuz-routed crude predates the 2026 conflict. Before February 2026, India imported approximately 1.5 million barrels per day of Iranian crude under OFAC General License U (which lapsed without renewal on 18 April), and the Reliance Jamnagar complex, the world's largest single-refinery site at 1.24 million barrels per day capacity, operates predominantly on Persian Gulf heavy crude.

No pipeline alternative exists; Indian refiners cannot switch to non-Gulf supply without months of capital conversion.

The post-Trump strategic autonomy doctrine, developed by Jaishankar's ministry since 2021, explicitly rejects bloc alignment in exchange for preserved optionality. In practice, that doctrine has produced the exact outcome Araghchi disclosed: India operating inside Iran's bilateral passage system, outside the Western coalition framework, with no written agreement protecting its flagged vessels. The autonomy doctrine's asymmetric cost falls on Indian mariners, not on Indian diplomats.

Escalation

India entering Iran's guided-passage system as the fourth named state, after Iraq, Pakistan, and Qatar , normalises the bilateral architecture at pace. Each new state that accepts Iranian guidance without a written agreement strengthens the operational precedent while weakening the legal case against it.

The Oman consultation track is the more consequential signal: Oman co-administers the Strait under UNCLOS, and any framework Muscat endorses would give Iran the co-administrator's implicit backing.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If Oman signs a co-administration framework with Iran, the Western coalition's UNCLOS-based legal argument for free transit loses its strongest supporting authority: the other littoral state with UNCLOS rights over the Strait.

    Short term · Medium
  • Risk

    India's absence of a written agreement with Iran means Tehran can revoke guided passage for Indian vessels without notice, exposing 13+ ships and their crews to IRGC discretion.

    Immediate · High
  • Opportunity

    India's inside position on the bilateral passage system makes Delhi a potential bridge broker between Western coalition states and Tehran, given its simultaneous engagement in both frameworks.

    Medium term · Low
First Reported In

Update #100 · Tehran prints the toll book; Delhi joins the queue

The Wire (India)· 17 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Mojtaba Kian was hanged in under 50 days from arrest, the fastest wartime espionage case in Hengaw's record, as Trump announced a peace deal. Amnesty places Iran's 2026 execution count above 200 at its fastest pace in 44 years; the diplomatic track has not altered the internal enforcement tempo.
China
China
Beijing accepted a Pakistani civilian briefing mission on the same day OFAC's GL V expired, keeping itself inside the deal architecture without being a named signatory. How Chinese banks respond to Monday's Hengli dollar-clearing decision is the first real-world test of whether the verbal MOU carries any institutional weight.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Islamabad split its highest-level delegation: army chief Munir to Tehran on the security track, Prime Minister Sharif and Foreign Minister Dar to Beijing before Monday's GL V-driven bank compliance decision. The architecture routes the deal's hardest problem, IRGC buy-in, through the general-officer channel that has extracted every wartime concession.
Israeli government
Israeli government
An unnamed Israeli official told the Times of Israel that Trump privately told Netanyahu the deal will dismantle Iran's nuclear programme and remove all its uranium, terms incompatible with what Tehran and a Reuters source describe. If Netanyahu believes he was promised full dismantlement and the deal delivers less, Israel holds a sabotage veto before any signature.
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Esmail Baghaei told state agency IRNA that nuclear issues are 'not in the current negotiations text' and the sequencing is: end the war first, then negotiate nuclear over two months. Baghaei's formulation preserves Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive while letting the civilian diplomacy track continue.
Donald Trump / White House
Donald Trump / White House
Trump declared the Iran deal 'largely negotiated' on 23 May via Truth Social and signed nothing; the White House's only paper was a Memorial Day proclamation. The verbal-track method converts maximum political signalling into minimum legal exposure: no congressional notification, no Senate treaty ratification, no instrument for Iran to formally reject.