In a bid to navigate the volatile sands of West Asian geopolitics, Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar engaged in a detailed phone discussion with his Omani counterpart, Sayyid Badr Albusaidi, on Thursday. The call centered on the rapidly deteriorating security landscape in the Middle East, triggered by a series of high-stakes military actions.
Post-conversation, Jaishankar shared insights on X, noting the productive exchange with Oman’s top diplomat regarding ongoing regional challenges. This diplomatic maneuver comes days after PM Narendra Modi’s conversation with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq, where he voiced strong condemnation against encroachments on Omani sovereignty and commended the protection afforded to Indian residents.
Both leaders concurred on the urgency of relentless diplomacy to quell the unrest. The backdrop to these talks includes a deadly assault on an oil tanker off Oman’s shores on March 2, which claimed the life of an Indian seafarer. The Marshall Islands-flagged vessel, laden with over 59,000 metric tons of oil, was hit by a drone boat 52 nautical miles from the coast, igniting a blaze in the engine room.
Swift rescue efforts by Omani authorities saved 21 crew members—16 from India, 4 from Bangladesh, and one Ukrainian. The Royal Navy of Oman remains vigilant, issuing alerts to nearby shipping. This incident underscores the perils facing maritime trade in the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for global oil flows.
The flashpoint erupted on February 28 with coordinated US and Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets, designed to cripple missile programs and command structures. The strikes killed prominent Iranian leaders, prompting a fierce Iranian counteroffensive via drones and missiles against American installations and proxies, engulfing the region in uncertainty.
For India, with deep economic stakes and a large diaspora in the Gulf, these engagements are more than courtesy calls—they’re lifelines to stability. Muscat’s role as a neutral broker adds weight to these interactions, potentially unlocking pathways to ceasefire negotiations amid the chaos.