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Iran Conflict 2026
3JUN

Chabahar waiver expires; India hands stake over

3 min read
09:04UTC

OFAC's Chabahar sanctions waiver expired at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April; India's IPGL had already transferred its $120 million Free Zone holding to an Iranian entity under a reversion clause.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

India loses its only US Iran exemption; the reversion clause bets sanctions are temporary.

The US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) Chabahar waiver expired at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April with no signed renewal text on the Treasury index. India's IPGL (India Ports Global Ltd) had already executed the operational transfer of its $120 million Chabahar Free Zone holding to an Iranian entity under a contractual reversion clause 1. India's Ministry of External Affairs framed the transfer as "tactical recalibration" rather than exit and confirmed it remains in conversation with Washington on a renewal arrangement. OFAC is the Treasury sub-agency that administers US sanctions; Chabahar is the Iranian deepwater port India developed as a Pakistan-bypass route to Afghanistan and Central Asia.

The lapse arrived as forecast . The conversation continued past the deadline; the deadline did not wait. India's Iran portfolio now runs at three speeds inside one ministry. Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri is publicly engaged on the Epaminondas shipping demarche after the IRGC seized the Indian-bound vessel on 22 April ; the MEA has held nine days of public silence on the 15 April Shamkhani designations naming five Indian nationals and eight India-registered firms; and Chabahar has now lost the only US sanctions exemption Delhi held for any Iran-facing infrastructure.

A reversion clause in a sanctions-driven asset transfer is an admission that the transferring party expects the sanctions regime to be temporary. Nothing signed in Washington this week supports that premise. The Iranian holding entity for the IPGL transfer becomes a subject of future OFAC designation if Hengli-style enforcement extends to non-Chinese facilities. Afghanistan and Central Asia trade routes that used Chabahar as a Pakistan bypass face renewed sanctions risk on every cargo from today.

The counter-reading is that Delhi has chosen the file with crews at sea (Epaminondas) and let the rest run because Mumbai and Chennai operators must be able to price their next cargo. That is the same ministerial logic that produced the silence on Shamkhani.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

India built and has been running a port in southern Iran called Chabahar, which gives it a direct sea route to Afghanistan and Central Asia without going through Pakistan, a country India has an adversarial relationship with. The US normally has sanctions on Iran but had given India a special exemption to keep running this port. That exemption expired on Sunday with no renewal. India has moved the paperwork so it looks like an Iranian company now operates the port temporarily, with a clause saying India can take it back later. India is betting that sanctions will eventually be lifted and it can return to normal operations. If the US decides to crack down harder on Indian firms doing business with Iran, that bet becomes expensive.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

**Chabahar** is India's only access point to Afghanistan and Central Asia that bypasses Pakistan. The port was developed as part of a multi-decade Indian infrastructure investment strategy that pre-dates the 2026 conflict; the first Indian cargo ship docked at Chabahar under the **IPGL** framework in 2019.

The waiver that lapsed on 26 April was originally granted under the first Trump administration in 2018 as a specific exception to Iran sanctions, because Washington recognised the strategic logic. The 2026 lapse reflects a change in administrative attention, not in strategic logic: **OFAC** has produced no Iran instrument of any kind for 57 days, and no one at the National Security Council appears to have been tasked with renewing a waiver that required active sign-off.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    If OFAC designates the Iranian entity that received the IPGL transfer, India's reversion clause converts from an exit route into a sanctions-exposure trap, forcing Delhi to choose between abandoning Chabahar permanently or fighting a designation in US courts.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Afghanistan and Central Asian states that use Chabahar as a Pakistan-bypass trade corridor now face renewed sanctions risk on every cargo shipment, deepening their economic isolation from Gulf and Asian markets.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The Chabahar lapse removes the one piece of US-India Iran alignment that had survived since 2018; without it, Delhi has no sanctions-waiver framework to point to when arguing it is a responsible partner in Iran policy.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

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Tribune India / Maritime Gateway· 26 Apr 2026
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