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By:

Commodore S.L. Deshmukh

31 October 2024 at 3:00:19 am

Holding the Line at Hormuz

Amid the Iran crisis, India’s quiet convoy war in the much-contested Strait reveals a maturing maritime power. Few bottlenecks are more consequential today than the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime hinge through which a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil and vast volumes of gas must pass. Weeks into the escalating Iran–Israel–United States conflict, traffic through Hormuz has slowed to a trickle, as insurers have recoiled and prices have lurched upward. For energy-importing economies...

Holding the Line at Hormuz

Amid the Iran crisis, India’s quiet convoy war in the much-contested Strait reveals a maturing maritime power. Few bottlenecks are more consequential today than the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime hinge through which a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil and vast volumes of gas must pass. Weeks into the escalating Iran–Israel–United States conflict, traffic through Hormuz has slowed to a trickle, as insurers have recoiled and prices have lurched upward. For energy-importing economies like India, the crisis is immediate and unforgiving. Heavily reliant on Gulf hydrocarbons, India has thus far conducted a quiet experiment in maritime statecraft by keeping ships moving through a contested chokepoint without tipping the balance of war. The hazards in Hormuz have rarely been confined to what can be seen. The present crisis has revived a worrying scenario - the alleged sowing of underwater mines, the menace of fast-attack craft and the fog of misidentification in crowded sea lanes. Even the hint of mining of the strait by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards is proving to be psychologically potent. Silent Strategy India’s response has been to wage a quiet convoy war. The Indian Navy has moved beyond simple escort duties to a layered system that blends intelligence, navigation, diplomacy and selective deterrence. Indian-flagged vessels departing terminals such as Ras Tanura are guided through the Persian Gulf on routes calibrated for both time and risk. The two-day approach to Hormuz is now treated as a managed operation. At the heart of the effort lies information. Merchantmen are instructed to broadcast their identity clearly via the Automatic Identification System, reducing the odds of fatal confusion in a tense environment. Warships, for their part, keep a deliberate distance from the most volatile waters, remaining in international zones while feeding ships a steady stream of real-time advice. The navy’s planners combine intelligence inputs with detailed seabed mapping to steer vessels around both natural shoals and suspected minefields. Once through the narrows and into the Gulf of Oman, the posture changes. There, Indian warships assume more traditional escort roles, maintaining constant communications and shepherding tankers into the Arabian Sea. Reports suggest a flotilla of at least five vessels of varying capabilities - some on standing missions, others surged to reinforce the effort - now operate across the wider arc. Their task is not only to deter opportunistic threats but also to reassure jittery crews and charterers that passage remains possible. The operation’s success is measured not in headlines but in hulls delivered. Indian-flagged LPG carriers such as  Nanda Devi ,  Pine Gas  and  Jag Vasant  have already made the passage under this system. In a theatre where delays can cascade into global shortages, each successful transit is a small victory for stability. Less noticed, but equally telling, is the navy’s humanitarian role. Warships have supplied stranded vessels with food and water, reminding seafarers that India’s presence is not merely martial but custodial. Yet steel and sensors are only part of the story. The more delicate work has been diplomatic. New Delhi has reportedly engaged regional stakeholders through back channels to secure tacit understandings that reduce the likelihood of interference. Subtle Evolution This blend of methods marks a subtle evolution in India’s grand strategy. For decades, the country’s approach to energy vulnerability leaned heavily on diversification and diplomacy. Those remain pillars. But the current crisis suggests a shift towards risk distribution: spreading exposure across routes, instruments and partners, while building the capacity to manage shocks at sea. The expansion of strategic petroleum reserves - sufficient, by some estimates, to cushion demand for over two months - has bought policymakers time. Time, in turn, has allowed the navy to operate deliberately rather than reactively. The intellectual scaffolding for such a shift is hardly new. As energy pundit Daniel Yergin has long argued, oil and gas are political commodities, and energy security is inseparable from the management of relationships. What is new is the degree to which India is operationalising that insight across domains. The navy’s guidance to merchantmen, the diplomats’ quiet assurances, and the technocrats’ stockpiles form a single system that treats the sea not as a distant expanse but as an extension of national policy. There are, of course, limits. India cannot unilaterally reopen a strait closed by great-power confrontation. Nor can it eliminate the risks inherent in a mined and contested waterway. Insurance premiums will remain elevated; some cargoes will be deferred; global prices will continue to reflect anxiety. But within these constraints, India has demonstrated an ability to carve out corridors of relative safety. The broader implication is that middle powers can do more than merely endure chokepoint crises. With the right mix of capability and craft, they can shape outcomes at the margins by keeping trade moving, calming markets and protecting their own lifelines. In an era when the map’s narrowest places are once again sites of contest, such competence is a strategic asset. For India, the lesson of Hormuz is unlikely to fade when the present crisis does. The habits formed now of integrated planning, of maritime attentiveness, of diplomatic subtlety will endure. Geography will not change; the strait will remain a pinch-point of global consequence. But the way India meets it has already begun to shift. Through the narrows, a more assured maritime power is taking shape. (The author is a retired naval aviation officer and a defence and geopolitical analyst. Views personal.)

Omar welcomes Indus Water Treaty suspension, calls it “most unfair document” for J&K



SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Friday welcomed the Central government’s decision to suspend the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) with Pakistan following the deadly Pahalgam attack that claimed 26 lives. He also referred to the treaty as the “most unfair document” for the people of J&K.


“The Government of India has taken some steps. As far as Jammu and Kashmir is concerned, let’s be honest. We have never been in favour of the Indus Waters Treaty. We have always believed it to be the most unfair document to people of J&K,” Abdullah told reporters in Srinagar after meeting representatives from the tourism, trade, and industry sectors. However, he noted that the long-term impact of this move is still uncertain.


The IWT suspension is part of India’s response to the brutal attack. Other actions include expelling Pakistani military attaches and shutting down the Attari land-transit point immediately.


When questioned about the impact of the April 22 attack on the region’s tourism industry, Abdullah dismissed concerns about monetary losses. “At this juncture, we are not counting rupees or paisa. Not one of the businessmen or stakeholders in the tourism industry who attended the meeting lamented the loss of business. Not one of them expressed any concern about what would happen to them.”


“Right now, our priority is to express solidarity with the bereaved,” he said, adding, “At some point in future, we may sit down to discuss the financial implications (of the attack) on J&K’s economy. But not a single stakeholder present in the meeting raised a demand for monetary relief for the losses they are suffering.”


Omar described the tourist exodus from J&K after the massacre as “heartbreaking”. The future of the Valley’s tourism sector remains uncertain, with widespread trip cancellations following the attack.

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