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FOREIGN AFFAIRS

India’s Active Neutrality Could Help Shape Peace in Gaza

From Shyam Bhatia

FILE PHOTO

London, October 14, 2025. Four days after the guns fell silent over Gaza, the fragile ceasefire is beginning to expose deeper currents, the strategic fault lines beneath the calm. What looks, at first glance, like humanitarian relief is in fact the opening phase of a vast regional recalibration. For India, long accustomed to balancing empathy with realpolitik in West Asia, the moment is more than symbolic: it is a reminder that influence in the Middle East now belongs to those who can talk to everyone and take sides with no one.

Indian diplomats and defence planners are quietly watching the negotiations that have followed the truce. Naval patrols in the eastern Mediterranean have been extended, and coordination channels remain open with UN and Red Crescent teams routing aid through Cyprus and Jordan.

South Block officials describe India’s stance as one of “active neutrality”, a posture that allows cooperation with both Israel and Arab partners while avoiding the optics of alignment. It is a role India first rehearsed during the 1980s, when its peacekeepers served under UNIFIL in Lebanon, and one that still carries moral weight precisely because it was earned in blood rather than proclaimed in slogans.

This calibrated neutrality could become a template for India’s wider engagement across the region, combining moral authority with operational reach.

For New Delhi, Gaza is another test of a foreign policy that has evolved from moralism to managed engagement. India was among the first non-Arab nations to recognise the PLO in 1975 and to host Yasser Arafat on repeated state visits. That early solidarity, born of the Non-Aligned Movement, coexists today with deep security and technology ties to Israel, whose defence industries now supply radar, drones and cyber-systems to the Indian armed forces.

What outsiders sometimes miss is that India’s diplomacy is less a contradiction than a continuum: it reflects a civilisational belief that relationships are not mutually exclusive.

Energy and diaspora also bind the story together. Nearly nine million Indians live and work in the Gulf, remitting billions each year; their safety depends on stability from Suez to Hormuz. When Indian naval ships patrol the Red Sea or the Levant, they are not projecting power for its own sake but protecting citizens, trade routes and reputations painstakingly built over half a century of quiet engagement. Officials privately admit that any escalation in Gaza reverberates instantly through the shipping lanes that carry India’s energy lifeline.

The Gaza truce itself is holding, though barely. Yet behind the television images of aid convoys and tearful reunions lies a more complex chessboard. Qatari and Egyptian mediators shuttle between capitals, balancing Western demands for humanitarian access with Israeli insistence on security guarantees. Iran, ever patient, plays its long game, hinting at calm while fuelling uncertainty.

The United States, desperate to prevent a regional flare-up, hails “constructive progress” even as it concedes that leverage now rests with the captors. And, once again, the same discreet network of intermediaries that thrived during Beirut’s hostage era has returned with former intelligence officers turned “consultants,” clerics with back-channel credibility, and businessmen fluent in both theology and trade.

Egypt, chronically dependent on Gulf funding, hopes to parlay its mediation into renewed Western aid. Jordan worries that another breakdown could send tens of thousands of refugees across its border. Iran sees opportunity: every day the ceasefire endures, it tightens its grip on proxy networks stretching from Gaza to Beirut. In this swirl, Israel’s unity government hangs by a thread, torn between the yearning of hostages’ families and the hawkish instinct to resume war.

For Israel, each freed hostage is proof of purpose; each concession a risk that the tactic will be repeated. For Hamas, whose tunnels are shattered but ideology intact, every negotiation extends its political life. What began as war has mutated into diplomacy by other means. In Beirut during the 1980s I watched this logic take shape: human lives became bargaining chips, and compassion itself a form of currency. It is that same “transactional humanism,” as one Western envoy now calls it, that defines Gaza’s uneasy peace.

India’s measured response has been noted in the region. New Delhi’s refusal to grandstand, praising all “efforts that lead to sustainable peace” while offering tangible medical and reconstruction aid — has strengthened its credibility with both sides.

Several senior Arab and Western envoys privately describe India as the only power able to speak credibly to both Jerusalem and Doha, a capacity that Delhi could choose to institutionalise through regular regional consultations.

In contrast to the megaphone diplomacy of larger powers, India’s quiet professionalism recalls an older tradition of non-aligned engagement: practical, patient, and rooted in memory. It is precisely this long memory — of Beirut, of Baghdad, of countless forgotten truces — that gives Indian diplomacy its weight when others reach for talking points.

Officials close to the Ministry of External Affairs note that India’s current outreach is less about symbolism and more about systems: training Palestinian doctors in Indian hospitals, funding water-purification projects in Gaza through UNRWA, and offering disaster-management expertise honed after the 2018 Kerala floods.

That outreach also extends to education. For decades, hundreds of Palestinian and other Arab students have studied in Indian universities under scholarships offered by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR). From engineering institutes in Delhi and Bhopal to medical colleges in Kerala and Karnataka, these programmes created a generation of professionals with firsthand experience of India’s pluralism and soft power. Many of them now hold senior positions in ministries, universities and humanitarian agencies across the Arab world — a quiet legacy of goodwill that continues to pay diplomatic dividends.

“Reconstruction is the only real counter-radicalisation policy,” one senior diplomat remarked privately. “It’s slow, visible, and impossible to weaponise.”

Those of us who reported from Beirut remember how quickly moral certainty eroded once hostages became the language of policy. Each release was both mercy and manipulation; each delay, a reminder that human sympathy could be monetised. Gaza risks entering that same moral loop. Every truck of flour, every exchange of prisoners, becomes another transaction in an open-ended market of despair. When negotiation becomes permanent, peace becomes a postponement.

The challenge for India and other leading voices in the Global South is to keep humanitarianism distinct from coercion: to support genuine relief without endorsing the logic of exchange. That means investing in long-term reconstruction, education and health, the slow, unglamorous work that undermines extremism more effectively than any airstrike. It also means maintaining the confidence of both sides so that one day, when the region tires of fatigue alone as its peacekeeper, those who still believe in dialogue can mediate something more durable than a pause in the shelling.

Already, diplomats in Cairo and Amman whisper about a “post-Gaza architecture”, a regional framework where India, Saudi Arabia and the UAE could jointly fund rebuilding projects under UN supervision. It may sound ambitious, but so did Camp David once, and the logic is similar: security through shared investment. If even fragments of that idea survive, India will have helped convert a ceasefire into the beginnings of peace-building.

If Delhi seizes the moment, it could translate decades of moral capital into strategic influence, shaping not just relief but the political horizon that follows.

Nearly forty years after Beirut, the stage and the actors have changed, but the play is familiar. Faith, fear, tears and geopolitics still share the same script. The question is whether the world — and India, whose voice now carries further than ever — can help write a different ending.

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