Tehran named the presidential aircraft carrying Abbas Araghchi to New Delhi on Thursday 'Minab168' 1, invoking the 168 schoolgirls killed in an Israeli missile strike on a school in the southern Iranian city of Minab during the war's opening hours. This was Iran's first state-symbolic deployment of the Minab casualty count in a multilateral diplomatic setting. Araghchi's attendance at the BRICS Foreign Ministers meeting, hosted by India's S Jaishankar, is already covered ; the new element is the aircraft name.
The Minab168 designation converts a quantified civilian atrocity into a diplomatic instrument. Every foreign minister who saw the aircraft livery on arrival at Palam faced a binary: acknowledge 168 dead girls, or be seen to ignore them. Jaishankar, as host, faces that binary in the most direct form. The naming is calibrated to exploit India's structural bind as a state that imports Iranian crude while maintaining strategic partnership with the United States.
India's standing line on the strait, "safe, unimpeded maritime flows", reads as neutral; any communique language closer to Iran's framing of Hormuz as a sovereign chokepoint would be readable by Tehran as endorsement. Whether Delhi's neutral line survives the joint text is the test the Minab168 arrival was designed to shape.
