Rubio and Jaishankar Outline Expanding India-US Strategic Partnership Amid Iran Crisis
By R Chandrakanth
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India has become one of America’s most important strategic partners globally
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India among handful of countries with global influence
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The ultimate goal is that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon
New Delhi. The escalating conflict involving Iran, maritime security in the Strait of Hormuz, energy resilience and the growing geopolitical role of India formed the centrepiece of discussions between US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar during a high-profile press conference in New Delhi on May 24, 2026.
Rubio’s first official visit to India as America’s top diplomat underscored the increasingly strategic nature of India-US ties at a time when global alignments are rapidly shifting under the pressure of wars, supply-chain disruptions, energy insecurity and intensifying geopolitical competition.
Beyond Bilateral Interests
The two leaders projected a partnership that now extends well beyond bilateral interests into broader global coordination on security, technology, trade, critical minerals, maritime stability and emerging technologies.
India’s Five Principles
Opening the press conference, Jaishankar laid out India’s broader approach to current global conflicts and crises through five key principles that he said continue to guide New Delhi’s foreign policy.
“India advocates dialogue and diplomacy to address conflicts. We support safe and unimpeded maritime commerce. We demand scrupulous respect for international law. We are against weaponization of market shares and resources. And we believe in the value of trusted partnerships and resilient supply chains to de-risk the global economy,” Jaishankar said.
The remarks reflected India’s balancing strategy amid growing instability in West Asia, where tensions surrounding Iran and the Strait of Hormuz have emerged as major concerns for global energy markets and maritime trade.
Multi-Alignment
Jaishankar said India was uniquely positioned because it maintains strong ties simultaneously with the United States, Israel, Iran and Gulf nations, forcing New Delhi to carefully manage multiple strategic relationships without treating geopolitics as a zero-sum contest.
“India is one of the very few countries which has very good relations with the United States, with Israel, with Iran and with the Gulf countries,” he said.
“For us, the challenge is how to maintain all these relationships, how to protect our equities and how to advance our interests.”
He described India’s approach as “multi-alignment,” arguing that a rising India with expanding global interests must increasingly engage multiple power centers simultaneously.
“In that sense, yes, it is multi-alignment because today’s India has that range of interests which require us to manage multiple accounts,” he said.
India-First
Jaishankar also framed the broader India-US relationship through the lens of national interest, noting that both governments openly prioritize their own countries while still finding large areas of strategic convergence.
“The administration has been very forthright in putting forward its foreign policy outlook as America First,” Jaishankar said.
“Where we are concerned, we have a view of India First.”
He stressed that both countries are guided by their respective national priorities and that the strength of the partnership comes from the growing overlap between those interests.
“There will be many areas where our national interests are in harmony and we work together, which is why we have a strategic partnership,” he said.
“There could be some where they don’t, in which case we have to manage those situations.”
Peace and Stability in West Asia Crucial
Jaishankar emphasized that peace and stability in West Asia remain crucial for India because of the country’s energy dependence on the region and the large Indian diaspora living there.
“For us, the welfare and well-being of the diaspora is crucial,” he said.
He also stressed India’s strong interest in keeping global energy prices stable and maritime trade routes open.
“We want to see energy prices go down because we are a very big importer of energy,” Jaishankar said. “We are very much in favor of safe and unimpeded maritime commerce.”
Energy security emerged as one of the most significant themes of the press conference, particularly against the backdrop of mounting fears surrounding the Strait of Hormuz.
Jaishankar revealed that India has significantly increased energy imports from the United States as part of a broader “de-risking” strategy aimed at diversifying supply chains and reducing vulnerability to geopolitical disruptions.
“There has been a significant increase in our energy imports from the United States,” he said.
“This is an era of de-risking. Probably energy, more than anything else, requires de-risking.”
He described diversification of supply sources as central to India’s long-term energy security strategy and argued that global energy markets must remain open and unconstrained.
“It is important to keep energy prices down for global growth,” Jaishankar added.
Secretary Emphasizes Strategic Partnership
Rubio, meanwhile, repeatedly emphasized that India has become one of America’s most important strategic partners globally, describing the relationship as far broader than a conventional bilateral alliance.
“Strategic partnership is something very different. It is when the interests of two nations align and they work together strategically to solve problems,” Rubio said.
“The breadth and scope of issues we work together on highlights the fact that India is one of the United States’ most important strategic partners in the world.”
Rubio said the partnership rests not only on converging geopolitical interests but also on shared democratic structures, accountability to voters and growing cooperation across technology, energy and security sectors.
“We are the two largest democracies in the world,” Rubio said. “Every decision we make ultimately has to be justified to our people.”
The US Secretary of State described India as one of only a handful of countries with the economic and diplomatic capacity to influence global outcomes on major strategic issues.
“There are only a handful of countries in the world that have both the economic and diplomatic power to influence strategic issues globally, and India is one of them,” Rubio said.
Technology Cooperation
Technology cooperation featured prominently during the interaction, with Rubio highlighting India’s growing role in advanced sectors such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors and deep technologies.
“It is a strategic alliance between two highly capable partners who have industries within our countries that are on the leading edge of some of the top technologies of the 21st century,” he said.
Rubio argued that the India-US technology partnership had become essential for shaping future global supply chains and innovation ecosystems.
Critical minerals, resilient supply chains and artificial intelligence were repeatedly discussed by both sides, reflecting growing concern over excessive dependence on concentrated global production networks.
“The overconcentration of reliance on a single source for anything, particularly things vital for our economies, is one of the great challenges of this century,” Rubio said.
Renewed India-US 10-Year Defence Partnership
The two leaders also discussed defence cooperation, with Jaishankar noting that the India-US 10-year major defence partnership framework agreement had recently been renewed and a comprehensive underwater domain awareness roadmap signed.
He said future defence cooperation would increasingly take into account India’s “Make in India” approach as well as lessons emerging from recent conflicts around the world.
Trade Agreement to be Finalised Soon
Trade negotiations formed another important pillar of the discussions.
Jaishankar said India and the United States were working toward concluding an interim agreement on reciprocal and mutually beneficial trade, which would eventually pave the way for a comprehensive bilateral trade arrangement envisioned during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Washington in February 2025.
“Our expectation is that an American team would be visiting India soon for that purpose,” he said.
Rubio said the United States had undertaken a broad reassessment of global trade policies after decades of outsourcing and supply-chain dependence that weakened American manufacturing and created vulnerabilities.
“There needed to be a rebalancing of how we approached global trade,” Rubio said.He stressed that the recalibration was global in nature and not directed specifically at India.“India is a massive economy. This is a big economy where you’re a leading trade partner.”
Rubio added that both countries were now close to finalizing a durable trade arrangement after recent negotiations.
“We’ve made tremendous progress,” he said.
“I think we’re going to wind up with a trade agreement between the United States and India that’s going to be enduring, beneficial to both sides and sustainable.”
He also pointed to rising Indian investments in the United States, saying roughly $20 billion had flowed into the American economy in recent months.
Immigration Issues
Mobility and immigration issues also figured during the press conference.Jaishankar raised concerns over visa-related difficulties being faced by legitimate Indian travelers, professionals and students, stressing that legal mobility should not be adversely affected even as both countries cooperate against illegal migration.
Rubio responded by clarifying that recent US immigration reforms were global in nature and not directed specifically at India.
“The United States is not focused on India specifically. This is global and is being applied across the world,” Rubio said.
He acknowledged that the US was undergoing a period of immigration “modernization” after facing a migration crisis involving millions of illegal entries over recent years.
Rubio nevertheless described the United States as one of the world’s most welcoming countries for immigrants and emphasized that reforms would inevitably create temporary friction and transitional challenges.
Significant Progress on West Asia Crisis
The most closely watched segment of the press conference, however, centered on Iran and the Strait of Hormuz.
Rubio revealed that “significant progress” had been made in diplomatic efforts involving the United States and Gulf partners over the previous 48 hours regarding the crisis.
Ultimate Goal to Ensure Iran Does Not Have Nuclear Weapon
“The ultimate goal is that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon,” Rubio said.
He warned that the Strait of Hormuz is an international waterway and accused Iran of threatening commercial shipping.
“This is an international waterway. They don’t own it,” Rubio said.“What they are doing now is threatening to destroy commercial vessels using an international waterway.”
Rubio argued that allowing such actions to continue unchecked would normalize a dangerous global precedent capable of being replicated elsewhere.
At the same time, he stressed that President Donald Trump’s preference remained a diplomatic solution rather than military escalation.
“He would much rather have me and the Department of State solve this problem than the Department of War having to solve this problem,” Rubio said.
According to Rubio, ongoing discussions with Gulf partners had produced the outline of a possible arrangement that could ensure unrestricted maritime access while addressing concerns surrounding Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
The US Secretary of State also delivered one of Washington’s strongest attacks yet on the Iranian regime, accusing Tehran of sponsoring terrorism globally and destabilizing multiple regions through proxy warfare.
“There is no nation on earth that sponsors more terrorism than Iran,” Rubio said.
He accused Tehran of financing Hezbollah and Hamas instead of investing in domestic economic development and claimed the United States had already achieved major military objectives against Iran, including degrading its navy, missile capabilities and defense industrial base.
Rubio defended the broader American approach toward Iran as necessary to protect international maritime commerce and prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
Both leaders also emphasized cooperation on counter-terrorism, maritime security and the Indo-Pacific.
‘Zero tolerance’ to terrorism
Jaishankar reiterated India’s “zero tolerance” approach toward terrorism and praised ongoing cooperation between Indian and American agencies, including the extradition last year of a key planner of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.
Rubio also welcomed India’s hosting of the upcoming Quad foreign ministers’ meeting, describing the grouping as another example of strategic alignment among countries capable of influencing global developments.
Throughout the interaction, the underlying message from both sides was clear: India-US relations are no longer confined to traditional bilateral diplomacy but are increasingly shaped by a shared effort to manage the geopolitical, technological and economic disruptions of a rapidly changing world order.
Rubio’s visit ultimately highlighted how both countries increasingly view each other not merely as partners, but as critical actors in shaping global stability across energy, technology, trade, maritime security and geopolitical strategy.