Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
10MAY

India hands Chabahar to Iran at Sunday midnight

4 min read
14:22UTC

India Ports Global is transferring its Chabahar Free Zone holding to an Iranian entity ahead of the waiver lapsing at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April. The transfer carries a contractual reversion clause if US sanctions ease.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

$120 million of Indian infrastructure now operates under Iranian control from Sunday morning, with a paper claw-back clause.

India Ports Global (IPGL), the Indian state-owned port operator, is executing a stake transfer of its holding in India Ports Global Chabahar Free Zone (IPGCFZ) to an Iranian entity ahead of the Chabahar sanctions waiver lapsing at 00:01 EDT on Sunday 26 April 1. The transfer carries a contractual provision to return control to India once US sanctions ease. India has invested approximately $120 million in Chabahar under the 2024 ten-year operational agreement with Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation. India's Ministry of External Affairs has confirmed engagement with Washington on a possible waiver renewal; no OFAC instrument has appeared in the Federal Register pipeline.

This is the first concrete instance in the 2026 war of a third-country state-owned entity withdrawing operationally from Iran under US sanctions pressure. Delhi denies the "exit" framing; the operational reality is that the port comes under Iranian control on Sunday morning with a clause to revert. The transfer also breaks the eight-day MEA silence on the 15 April OFAC designations of the Shamkhani network, which named Indian nationals and India-registered firms . Delhi's preferred answer to the Shamkhani question turns out to be operational withdrawal rather than public statement.

The reversion clause is legally novel inside the 2026 sanctions context: it creates a contractual obligation to India inside an Iranian-controlled entity that is itself subject to US secondary sanctions. Any future activation would require an OFAC general license, so Delhi has pre-negotiated re-entry into a sanctions problem rather than exited one. The waiver expiry surfaced in the prior briefing ; the IPGL transfer is the operational consequence. India keeps the contract. Iran gets the keys.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

India built and operates a port in south-eastern Iran called Chabahar, investing $120 million and signing a ten-year deal in 2024. Chabahar gives India a direct shipping route to Afghanistan and Central Asia without crossing Pakistan. The US has sanctioned Iran since the 1970s, but India held a special exemption (called a waiver) allowing Chabahar operations to continue legally. That exemption expired at midnight EDT on Sunday 26 April, and the US did not renew it. Facing that deadline, India transferred operational control of the port to an Iranian company, but wrote into the contract that India gets it back once US sanctions ease. India steps back just enough to avoid breaking US sanctions law, while keeping a contractual right to return. This is the first time any state-owned company from a third country has withdrawn from Iranian infrastructure because of the 2026 war's sanctions pressure.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC's 15 April designation of Indian individuals and firms in the Shamkhani network crossed a threshold: it established that the US will apply secondary sanctions to Indian entities with Iran exposure, not merely to Iranian and Chinese actors. The Chabahar waiver was India's only formal exemption from that architecture; its lapse on 26 April removed the legal cover Delhi had relied on since 2024.

India's state refiners, Indian Oil and Hindustan Petroleum, process crude purchases in dollar-denominated instruments that pass through US-linked correspondent banks. OFAC secondary sanctions would cut those refiners from dollar clearing, a systemic disruption to India's oil import infrastructure, not merely a Chabahar-specific problem. The Chabahar transfer eliminates the most visible exposure before that broader enforcement risk activates.

The IRGC seizure of the Epaminondas on 22 April, carrying cargo bound for Mundra in Gujarat , put India in the position of having Iranian military forces attacking its shipping while simultaneously holding Iranian port assets. The Chabahar transfer resolves half of that contradiction by removing the direct asset exposure.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    India Ports Global's reversion-clause transfer establishes a template other third-country state entities may use: nominal withdrawal from Iranian assets to clear OFAC secondary-sanctions exposure while preserving contractual re-entry rights.

    Short term · 0.78
  • Risk

    If OFAC determines the reversion clause makes the transfer nominal rather than genuine, India could face the same secondary-sanctions exposure as before the transfer, with the additional legal problem of a potentially fraudulent instrument.

    Medium term · 0.58
  • Consequence

    China's Gwadar port operates without a competing Indian-managed alternative during any period India's Chabahar operations are suspended, strengthening Beijing's logistics position in the western Indian Ocean.

    Medium term · 0.72
First Reported In

Update #79 · Islamabad 3 collapses; Witkoff grounded, talks stall

Business Standard· 25 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Israel
Israel
Israeli strikes on Hezbollah positions in Lebanon continued through the weekend, maintaining the secondary front. The IDF has publicly named Mojtaba Khamenei as an assassination target; his courier-governance mode complicates targeting but does not remove him from the order.
Russia
Russia
Putin told a Moscow press conference that Washington, not Tehran or Moscow, killed the Russia-custody uranium arrangement by demanding US-territory-only storage. Neither Tehran nor Washington has corroborated the account, which appeared in second-tier outlets only, consistent with a trial balloon rather than a formal position.
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
HMS Dragon was redeployed from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Middle East on 9 May, the first physical European platform commitment to the Gulf. The Ministry of Defence called it "prudent planning" while publishing no rules of engagement, no tasking order, and no vessel name, committing a named asset to a conflict zone before the political instrument authorising it exists.
United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates
UAE air defences intercepted two Iranian drones over its territory on 10 May, a kinetic escalation six days after the Fujairah oil terminal strike that drew no formal protest. The three-state simultaneous operation, not the severity of individual strikes, appears to have crossed the threshold at which the GCC states collectively began responding.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh issued the first formal Gulf-state protest of the conflict on 10 May, demanding an "immediate halt to blatant attacks on territories and territorial waters of Gulf states", ending 10 weeks of channelling displeasure through OPEC+ quota discussions. The protest forecloses Saudi Arabia's preferred quiet-channel role and reduces the functioning back-channel architecture to Pakistan alone.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha is simultaneously a strike target, the site of the Safesea Neha attack 23 nautical miles offshore, and an active MOU mediator: Qatar's prime minister met Rubio and Vance in Washington the same weekend. Whether Qatar issues its own formal protest or maintains its dual role is the critical escalation indicator for the week of 11 May.