When Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Arab foreign ministers in New Delhi that India continues to support the Palestinian people and ongoing Gaza peace efforts, the statement sounded familiar. India has said similar things for decades. What made this moment different was not the phrasing but the geopolitical theatre in which it was delivered.
The second India Arab Foreign Ministers Meeting took place at a time when West Asia is undergoing a structural rather than cyclical transformation. The Gaza ceasefire remains fragile. The United States is attempting to recast itself as a global peace broker through President Donald Trump’s controversial Board of Peace initiative. The Arab world is recalibrating its collective voice. And India is quietly testing how far it can go without losing strategic autonomy.
This was not symbolism. It was strategic signalling.
India’s Palestine position is no longer ideological, it is strategic
For much of the Cold War and even after, India’s support for Palestine was anchored in ideology, anti colonial solidarity and the Non Aligned Movement. That era is over.
Today, India’s reiteration of support for Palestinians must be read through three contemporary lenses.
First, India has deepened defence, technology and intelligence cooperation with Israel to unprecedented levels. Second, India’s economic and energy security is closely tied to Gulf Arab states. Third, India increasingly seeks recognition as a global mediator rather than a moral commentator.
Balancing these competing realities requires extreme diplomatic discipline. Modi’s remarks achieved precisely that. They reaffirmed humanitarian and political support for Palestine without altering India’s operational engagement with Israel. In international relations terms, this is hedging at a high level.
The Palestinian Foreign Minister’s assertion that India is uniquely positioned to mediate is telling. It suggests that New Delhi’s credibility has not eroded despite its expanding Israel ties. That credibility rests on consistency, aid delivery and refusal to publicly militarise the discourse.
The Gaza peace plan endorsement was carefully worded and deliberately limited
The Prime Minister welcomed ongoing peace efforts including the Gaza peace plan. He did not endorse its architecture. That distinction matters.
The Trump backed Board of Peace initiative raises serious international law and governance concerns. Lifetime chairmanship, pay to stay membership and financial thresholds for permanence sit uneasily with established multilateral norms. The proposal appears transactional rather than institutional.
India’s decision to not commit to the Board at this stage is therefore not hesitation. It is calculation.
New Delhi understands that joining an initiative with unclear legal status, questionable accountability and personalised leadership risks diluting India’s longstanding advocacy for rule based global order. The Ministry of External Affairs has clearly chosen strategic ambiguity over premature alignment.
This restraint enhances India’s diplomatic leverage rather than diminishing it.
Why the Arab world still matters to India’s global rise
Modi’s emphasis on civilisational bonds and people to people ties was not rhetorical nostalgia. The Arab world is critical to India’s future in four hard power domains.
Energy security remains paramount as India’s economy expands. Trade corridors linking India with the Middle East and Europe through the India Middle East Europe Economic Corridor are strategic alternatives to contested routes. Defence cooperation with Gulf states has intensified. And remittances from the Indian diaspora in the Arab world remain economically significant.
By reaffirming support for Palestine in an Arab collective forum, India strengthened its trust capital across the region. This is essential as West Asian states increasingly expect partners to engage politically, not merely commercially.
Legal subtext matters more than political statements
India’s language carefully avoided endorsing any outcome that bypasses international law. The Palestinian minister’s emphasis on dialogue, humanitarian principles and legality aligns with India’s consistent voting behaviour at the United Nations.
New Delhi has historically opposed unilateral solutions, whether imposed by military force or diplomatic fiat. The Gaza conflict engages issues of occupation, proportionality, civilian protection and self determination. India’s refusal to reduce these complexities into binary alignments protects its legal credibility.
This is particularly relevant as India seeks a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. Consistency in legal reasoning strengthens its case far more than episodic activism.
Strategic autonomy is being practised, not preached
The most significant takeaway from this episode is that India is practising strategic autonomy rather than proclaiming it.
By engaging Arab leaders while maintaining Israel ties, by welcoming peace efforts without endorsing flawed mechanisms, and by leaving the Board of Peace decision open, India preserved manoeuvrability.
This approach contrasts sharply with middle powers that have allowed domestic politics or alliance pressures to dictate West Asia policy. India is demonstrating that restraint can be power.
India is positioning itself as a systemic actor, not a camp follower
Modi’s meeting with Arab foreign ministers was not about Gaza alone. It was about how India intends to operate in a fragmented global order where legitimacy, law and leverage must coexist.
India is not rushing to chair peace boards, nor is it issuing moral ultimatums. Instead, it is investing in credibility, consistency and consequence.
In an era where performative diplomacy often overshadows substance, India’s Gaza posture signals something more durable. A country preparing not just to speak for the Global South, but to shape the rules by which global peace is negotiated.
That is not neutrality. It is strategic maturity.