PM Modi Warns of Long-Lasting Impact of US-Iran War in Rajya Sabha — India's Energy, Trade and Diplomacy on the Line
Digital Desk
PM Modi addresses Rajya Sabha on the West Asia conflict, warning of long-lasting challenges for India's energy, trade, and 1 crore diaspora. Full analysis here.
PM Modi Warns of Long-Lasting Impact of US-Iran War in Rajya Sabha — India's Energy, Trade and Diplomacy on the Line
For the first time since the West Asia war erupted, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stood before both Houses of Parliament to deliver a sobering message: brace yourselves — the worst may not be over yet.
Addressing the Rajya Sabha on March 24, 2026 — 25 days into the conflict that began when the US and Israel launched a joint operation against Iran on February 28, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — Prime Minister Narendra Modi issued one of his most cautionary statements in recent political memory. The war in West Asia, he told the Upper House, has created a serious global energy crisis. For India, the challenges are economic, security-related, and humanitarian. And critically, their impact may be long-lasting.
It was a rare moment of unvarnished realism from the Prime Minister — and one the country needed to hear.
What Modi Said — And Why It Matters
Speaking a day after addressing the Lok Sabha on the same subject, PM Modi expanded India's official position in the Rajya Sabha with greater detail and urgency. Key statements from his address include:
- The war has been ongoing for more than three weeks and has already created serious disruptions for the entire world.
- India's routine supply of petrol, diesel, cooking gas, and fertilisers has been affected.
- The Strait of Hormuz — a critical maritime chokepoint through which nearly one-fifth of the world's oil supply passes — has seen severely disrupted shipping movement.
- Indian crew members remain stranded in the Strait of Hormuz region.
- Over 3,75,000 Indians have returned safely to India from West Asian nations since the conflict began, including nearly 1,000 from Iran — of whom over 700 are medical students.
- India is in active diplomatic communication with the governments of Iran, Israel, the United States, and all Gulf nations.
- India has called the closure of the Strait of Hormuz "unacceptable" and demanded its reopening.
- The government has diversified crude oil imports from 27 to 41 countries to reduce dependence on any single supply corridor.
- Strategic petroleum reserves have been bolstered, and coal stocks at power plants remain adequate to ensure uninterrupted electricity supply.
- India imports approximately 60% of its LPG requirements — the government has increased domestic production and is prioritising supply to household consumers.
The Prime Minister drew an explicit parallel with the COVID-19 pandemic, urging citizens to respond with the same patience, restraint, and collective calm that saw India through that crisis.
The Strait of Hormuz: India's Most Critical Vulnerability
At the heart of India's exposure to the West Asia war lies one narrow waterway — the Strait of Hormuz. Approximately 20% of the world's oil supply passes through this 33-kilometre-wide passage between Iran and Oman. India, which imports around 85% of its crude oil needs, relies heavily on this route for supplies from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, and Kuwait.
Iran's retaliatory attacks on oil-exporting neighbours and its effective disruption of maritime traffic through the Strait have introduced an energy shock of a scale India has not faced since the Gulf War of 1990-91. The cascading impact on petrol and diesel prices, LPG availability, fertiliser supply chains, and ultimately food inflation is already being felt — and PM Modi's warning that these effects may be long-lasting is not political rhetoric. It is an honest assessment of structural supply chain vulnerability.
The government's response — diversifying import sources, maintaining strategic reserves, increasing domestic LPG production, and forming a daily inter-ministerial monitoring group — reflects sound crisis management. But the Opposition is not entirely wrong to note that some of these measures should have been activated sooner.
The Diplomatic Tightrope India Must Walk
India's foreign policy position on the West Asia conflict is one of the most delicate in its recent diplomatic history. New Delhi has deep, multidimensional relationships with all the primary parties:
- Iran: A historic civilisational partnership, shared interest in Chabahar Port and Central Asian connectivity, and a large Indian community.
- United States: India's most consequential strategic partner, primary defence technology supplier, and anchor of the Quad alliance.
- Israel: A major defence equipment supplier and technology partner, with bilateral ties that have grown significantly over the past decade.
- Gulf States: Home to nearly one crore Indians, the source of billions in annual remittances, and a primary energy supplier.
Navigating this web of relationships while avoiding explicit alignment with any party is extraordinarily difficult. PM Modi's statements — calling for dialogue, opposing attacks on civilians and energy infrastructure, urging de-escalation, and reiterating India's commitment to peace — represent a carefully calibrated neutral position. But neutrality in this conflict comes with its own political costs domestically, as Opposition voices have pointed out.
Congress MP Jairam Ramesh and other Opposition leaders have criticised the government for not explicitly condemning the US-Israel strikes on Iran, raising questions about India's perceived impartiality. Samajwadi Party's Ramgopal Yadav urged PM Modi to leverage his personal rapport with leaders of all three parties to broker de-escalation. These are not unreasonable asks from a country that has historically championed non-alignment and dialogue.
Opposition Criticism: Delayed Response or Deliberate Diplomacy?
The most pointed Opposition criticism centres not on what PM Modi said — but on when he said it. Congress MP Priyanka Chaturvedi noted that the Prime Minister was addressing Parliament only in the third week of the crisis, arguing that an earlier national address would have prevented misinformation, managed public anxiety over LPG shortages, and clarified India's diplomatic stance on the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader.
The government's decision to send PM Modi to Israel during an active conflict — a visit that drew significant attention — has also raised questions about India's perceived proximity to the US-Israel position. The three-day delay in conveying official condolences on the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was highlighted as a diplomatic misstep by multiple Opposition members.
These critiques reflect a genuine public debate about whether India's crisis communication matched the gravity of a conflict affecting one crore of its citizens abroad and the energy security of 1.4 billion at home.
What Happens Next: Three Scenarios for India
As PM Modi concluded his Rajya Sabha address, the geopolitical landscape shifted slightly — US President Donald Trump announced a five-day extension to his deadline on striking Iranian energy infrastructure, citing "very good and productive" negotiations. Iran's new leadership, led by Mojtaba Khamenei, has indicated openness to dialogue. These are fragile green shoots of de-escalation — but the situation remains deeply volatile.
For India, three scenarios define the road ahead:
Scenario 1 — Diplomatic resolution within weeks: If US-Iran negotiations succeed, the Strait of Hormuz reopens, and supply chains gradually normalise. India's energy security stabilises, LPG prices ease, and the economic damage — while real — remains manageable.
Scenario 2 — Prolonged conflict with partial disruption: The war continues at reduced intensity, with sporadic Strait disruptions. India's diversified import strategy holds, but fuel prices remain elevated and inflation stays above comfort levels through the kharif season.
Scenario 3 — Escalation and full Strait closure: Iranian strikes intensify, the Strait remains shut for an extended period, and global oil prices spike above $150 per barrel. India's strategic reserves provide a buffer of approximately 75 days — but beyond that, the economic consequences would be severe.
PM Modi's COVID-19 parallel was deliberate. It was a signal to both Parliament and the public: prepare for the longer arc, not just the immediate crisis.
Conclusion: Honest Leadership in Uncertain Times
PM Modi's Rajya Sabha address on the West Asia conflict will not satisfy everyone. The Opposition wants sharper condemnation of aggression. Citizens want firmer assurances on LPG and fuel prices. Diplomats want clearer strategic signals. These are all legitimate expectations.
But what PM Modi's address did deliver — bluntly and without false comfort — is the message that the PM Modi West Asia conflict warning of 2026 deserves to be taken seriously. The impact may be long-lasting. India must be prepared. And unity — not political point-scoring — is what this moment demands.
Whether Parliament rises to that standard in the days ahead will say as much about India's democratic maturity as it does about its foreign policy.
PM Modi Warns of Long-Lasting Impact of US-Iran War in Rajya Sabha — India's Energy, Trade and Diplomacy on the Line
Digital Desk
PM Modi Warns of Long-Lasting Impact of US-Iran War in Rajya Sabha — India's Energy, Trade and Diplomacy on the Line
For the first time since the West Asia war erupted, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stood before both Houses of Parliament to deliver a sobering message: brace yourselves — the worst may not be over yet.
Addressing the Rajya Sabha on March 24, 2026 — 25 days into the conflict that began when the US and Israel launched a joint operation against Iran on February 28, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — Prime Minister Narendra Modi issued one of his most cautionary statements in recent political memory. The war in West Asia, he told the Upper House, has created a serious global energy crisis. For India, the challenges are economic, security-related, and humanitarian. And critically, their impact may be long-lasting.
It was a rare moment of unvarnished realism from the Prime Minister — and one the country needed to hear.
What Modi Said — And Why It Matters
Speaking a day after addressing the Lok Sabha on the same subject, PM Modi expanded India's official position in the Rajya Sabha with greater detail and urgency. Key statements from his address include:
- The war has been ongoing for more than three weeks and has already created serious disruptions for the entire world.
- India's routine supply of petrol, diesel, cooking gas, and fertilisers has been affected.
- The Strait of Hormuz — a critical maritime chokepoint through which nearly one-fifth of the world's oil supply passes — has seen severely disrupted shipping movement.
- Indian crew members remain stranded in the Strait of Hormuz region.
- Over 3,75,000 Indians have returned safely to India from West Asian nations since the conflict began, including nearly 1,000 from Iran — of whom over 700 are medical students.
- India is in active diplomatic communication with the governments of Iran, Israel, the United States, and all Gulf nations.
- India has called the closure of the Strait of Hormuz "unacceptable" and demanded its reopening.
- The government has diversified crude oil imports from 27 to 41 countries to reduce dependence on any single supply corridor.
- Strategic petroleum reserves have been bolstered, and coal stocks at power plants remain adequate to ensure uninterrupted electricity supply.
- India imports approximately 60% of its LPG requirements — the government has increased domestic production and is prioritising supply to household consumers.
The Prime Minister drew an explicit parallel with the COVID-19 pandemic, urging citizens to respond with the same patience, restraint, and collective calm that saw India through that crisis.
The Strait of Hormuz: India's Most Critical Vulnerability
At the heart of India's exposure to the West Asia war lies one narrow waterway — the Strait of Hormuz. Approximately 20% of the world's oil supply passes through this 33-kilometre-wide passage between Iran and Oman. India, which imports around 85% of its crude oil needs, relies heavily on this route for supplies from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, and Kuwait.
Iran's retaliatory attacks on oil-exporting neighbours and its effective disruption of maritime traffic through the Strait have introduced an energy shock of a scale India has not faced since the Gulf War of 1990-91. The cascading impact on petrol and diesel prices, LPG availability, fertiliser supply chains, and ultimately food inflation is already being felt — and PM Modi's warning that these effects may be long-lasting is not political rhetoric. It is an honest assessment of structural supply chain vulnerability.
The government's response — diversifying import sources, maintaining strategic reserves, increasing domestic LPG production, and forming a daily inter-ministerial monitoring group — reflects sound crisis management. But the Opposition is not entirely wrong to note that some of these measures should have been activated sooner.
The Diplomatic Tightrope India Must Walk
India's foreign policy position on the West Asia conflict is one of the most delicate in its recent diplomatic history. New Delhi has deep, multidimensional relationships with all the primary parties:
- Iran: A historic civilisational partnership, shared interest in Chabahar Port and Central Asian connectivity, and a large Indian community.
- United States: India's most consequential strategic partner, primary defence technology supplier, and anchor of the Quad alliance.
- Israel: A major defence equipment supplier and technology partner, with bilateral ties that have grown significantly over the past decade.
- Gulf States: Home to nearly one crore Indians, the source of billions in annual remittances, and a primary energy supplier.
Navigating this web of relationships while avoiding explicit alignment with any party is extraordinarily difficult. PM Modi's statements — calling for dialogue, opposing attacks on civilians and energy infrastructure, urging de-escalation, and reiterating India's commitment to peace — represent a carefully calibrated neutral position. But neutrality in this conflict comes with its own political costs domestically, as Opposition voices have pointed out.
Congress MP Jairam Ramesh and other Opposition leaders have criticised the government for not explicitly condemning the US-Israel strikes on Iran, raising questions about India's perceived impartiality. Samajwadi Party's Ramgopal Yadav urged PM Modi to leverage his personal rapport with leaders of all three parties to broker de-escalation. These are not unreasonable asks from a country that has historically championed non-alignment and dialogue.
Opposition Criticism: Delayed Response or Deliberate Diplomacy?
The most pointed Opposition criticism centres not on what PM Modi said — but on when he said it. Congress MP Priyanka Chaturvedi noted that the Prime Minister was addressing Parliament only in the third week of the crisis, arguing that an earlier national address would have prevented misinformation, managed public anxiety over LPG shortages, and clarified India's diplomatic stance on the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader.
The government's decision to send PM Modi to Israel during an active conflict — a visit that drew significant attention — has also raised questions about India's perceived proximity to the US-Israel position. The three-day delay in conveying official condolences on the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was highlighted as a diplomatic misstep by multiple Opposition members.
These critiques reflect a genuine public debate about whether India's crisis communication matched the gravity of a conflict affecting one crore of its citizens abroad and the energy security of 1.4 billion at home.
What Happens Next: Three Scenarios for India
As PM Modi concluded his Rajya Sabha address, the geopolitical landscape shifted slightly — US President Donald Trump announced a five-day extension to his deadline on striking Iranian energy infrastructure, citing "very good and productive" negotiations. Iran's new leadership, led by Mojtaba Khamenei, has indicated openness to dialogue. These are fragile green shoots of de-escalation — but the situation remains deeply volatile.
For India, three scenarios define the road ahead:
Scenario 1 — Diplomatic resolution within weeks: If US-Iran negotiations succeed, the Strait of Hormuz reopens, and supply chains gradually normalise. India's energy security stabilises, LPG prices ease, and the economic damage — while real — remains manageable.
Scenario 2 — Prolonged conflict with partial disruption: The war continues at reduced intensity, with sporadic Strait disruptions. India's diversified import strategy holds, but fuel prices remain elevated and inflation stays above comfort levels through the kharif season.
Scenario 3 — Escalation and full Strait closure: Iranian strikes intensify, the Strait remains shut for an extended period, and global oil prices spike above $150 per barrel. India's strategic reserves provide a buffer of approximately 75 days — but beyond that, the economic consequences would be severe.
PM Modi's COVID-19 parallel was deliberate. It was a signal to both Parliament and the public: prepare for the longer arc, not just the immediate crisis.
Conclusion: Honest Leadership in Uncertain Times
PM Modi's Rajya Sabha address on the West Asia conflict will not satisfy everyone. The Opposition wants sharper condemnation of aggression. Citizens want firmer assurances on LPG and fuel prices. Diplomats want clearer strategic signals. These are all legitimate expectations.
But what PM Modi's address did deliver — bluntly and without false comfort — is the message that the PM Modi West Asia conflict warning of 2026 deserves to be taken seriously. The impact may be long-lasting. India must be prepared. And unity — not political point-scoring — is what this moment demands.
Whether Parliament rises to that standard in the days ahead will say as much about India's democratic maturity as it does about its foreign policy.