An Indian mariner was killed on Monday when a bomb-laden surface drone detonated against the hull of the MKD Vyom, a Marshall Islands-flagged tanker, 52 nautical miles northwest of Muscat. The same vessel had been struck by a projectile on Saturday — two attacks on one ship in 48 hours. In a separate incident, the MV Skylight was hit near Oman's Khasab Port in the Musandam peninsula , injuring four crew; 20 were evacuated. The Indian national is the first from his country to die in the conflict.
India has nine million nationals working in the Gulf States and imports roughly 85% of its crude oil, making it acutely exposed to both the humanitarian and economic dimensions of the conflict. Brent Crude stood at $73 before the first strikes ; it is now above $82 and climbing. Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Israel on 25–26 February — 48 hours before the campaign began — and New Delhi had not publicly commented on the conflict . The opposition Indian National Congress condemned the assassination of a head of state, but the government maintained silence.
That silence is now harder to sustain. India's historical position — maintaining ties with both Iran and Israel, purchasing Iranian oil when sanctions permitted, deepening defence cooperation with Washington and Tel Aviv — depends on the conflict remaining one that New Delhi can navigate around rather than through. An Indian citizen is dead, on a vessel struck twice in two days, in waters that India's merchant fleet cannot avoid. The Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea are India's primary maritime trade corridors, not optional shipping lanes. New Delhi faces a decision its foreign policy apparatus has spent decades deferring: whether the safety of its diaspora, the stability of its energy supply, and the exposure of its merchant sailors require it to take a position on a Middle Eastern war that is, with each passing day, becoming harder to treat as someone else's.
