India's Chabahar port sanctions waiver lapses at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April 2026, roughly two days from publication. India's Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) confirmed on Friday that it is "engaging with US" on renewal; no text has been published 1. The waiver is Delhi's sole US sanctions exemption covering investment in the Iranian port built around the 2016 trilateral agreement, which carries Afghan and Central Asian trade through a route that bypasses Pakistan.
The deadline stacks on two unresolved India files. Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri's office has now held public silence for nine days on the 15 April Shamkhani network designations, which named five Indian nationals and eight India-registered firms . On 22 April the IRGC seized the tanker Epaminondas, carrying cargo bound for Mundra port in Gujarat, and the MEA engaged Tehran quietly the following day while still refusing public comment on the Treasury list .
Three US-Iran pressure points converge on one desk over the weekend. Indian crews are at sea under IRGC fire; Indian firms sit on a live OFAC designation list; Indian port rights lapse at the weekend. For Indian charterers with cargo bound for Mundra or Chennai, a waiver lapse translates to secondary sanctions exposure on ships already afloat, because the statute does not distinguish between cargoes booked before expiry and after.
The structural beneficiary of any Indian pullback is Chinese carriage. Delhi has used Chabahar as the anchor of a triangulation that worked only because the US carved a bespoke exemption out of the broader Iran sanctions architecture; let it lapse and the triangulation collapses into two bilateral disputes, India-US over sanctions and India-Iran over ship safety, with Chinese-flagged shipping the default replacement. Every additional day Misri stays silent on Treasury designations while demanding IRGC restraint is a day Mumbai and Chennai operators cannot price their next cargo.
