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Current Affairs

Article
16 Jul 2026

Cabinet Approves Semicon 2.0, Mobile Manufacturing, Urea Plants, and Highway Projects

Why in the News?

  • The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA), chaired by PM Modi, has cleared several major projects, including Semicon Mission 2.0 worth Rs. 1.27 lakh crore.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background
  • Key Projects (Semicon 2.0, MPMS, Significance, etc.)

Background

  • India has been pursuing an aggressive strategy to strengthen domestic manufacturing and reduce dependence on imports across critical sectors.
  • This aligns with the broader Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India The Cabinet approvals cover four major areas:
    • Semiconductor manufacturing: critical for electronics, AI, and defence
    • Mobile phone manufacturing: a key export sector
    • Urea production: essential for agricultural self-sufficiency
    • Highway infrastructure: for improved connectivity
  • These decisions come at a time when global supply chain disruptions, memory chip shortages, and geopolitical tensions have highlighted the need for domestic capabilities.

India Semiconductor Mission 2.0

  • About the Programme
    • The Cabinet has approved Rs. 1.27 lakh crore for the second edition of the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM 2.0), aimed at developing India's semiconductor design and manufacturing ecosystem.
  • Expected Outcomes
    • Investments of around Rs. 4 lakh crore are expected to be attracted.
    • Semiconductor production worth Rs. 2 lakh crore during the scheme period.
    • Self-reliance in indigenous chip production by the end of the programme.
  • Six Pillars of Semicon 2.0
    • Design of chips
    • Development of chips
    • Production of indigenous chips
    • Support for raw material suppliers including minerals and gases
    • Meeting chip requirements for AI devices
    • Building end-to-end semiconductor value chain
  • Comparison with ISM 1.0
    • ISM 1.0 was allocated Rs. 76,000 crore.
    • Under ISM 1.0, the government approved 12 projects with cumulative investments of around Rs. 1.64 lakh crore.
    • Majority of investment came from Tata Electronics and its semiconductor arm.
  • Strategic Timing
    • The programme comes at a critical time when:
      • The world is facing a memory chip shortage.
      • Companies are working on enhancing production capacity.
      • Demand for AI-related chips is rising.
      • Geopolitical tensions are affecting global supply chains.

Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS)

  • About the Scheme
    • The Cabinet approved an outlay of Rs. 62,500 crore for the Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme to build Indian brands, achieve technological sovereignty, and scale up local mobile production.
  • Key Features
    • Incentive support on eligible sales at rates ranging from 2.25% to 5%.
    • Additional incentive of up to 1.5% linked to domestic sourcing of key components and sub-assemblies.
    • Additional incentive of 3% on eligible sales for design and R&D of the product.
    • Focus on building Indian brands in the mobile phone sector.
  • Expected Outcomes
    • Cumulative mobile phone production expected to reach around Rs. 39 lakh crore during the scheme tenure.
    • Significant increase in exports of mobile phones.
    • Generation of around 60,000 direct jobs.
    • Creation of Indian patents in design and R&D.

National Investment Policy for Urea (NIPU 2026)

  • About the Policy
    • The Cabinet approved the National Investment Policy for Urea (NIPU 2026) to set up nine new gas-based urea plants with a production capacity of 10 million tonnes, aiming to make India self-reliant in the most widely consumed fertiliser.
  • Current Situation
    • Annual urea demand: Rising at 5% annually
    • Domestic production: Around 30 million tonnes
    • Total requirement: 40 million tonnes
    • Imports: 10 million tonnes to meet the shortage
  • Key Changes from NIP 2012
    • Separation of fixed and variable costs for greater transparency.
    • Viable Return on Equity (RoE) band with a floor at 12% and ceiling at 16%.
    • Foreign exchange risk mitigation through conversion of fixed costs into rupees after four years based on prevailing exchange rates.
  • Expected Savings
    • These measures are estimated to result in savings of over Rs. 250 crore for each plant established under NIPU-2026 compared with NIP-2012.
  • Equal Treatment
    • Incentives under the policy will be the same for private, government, and cooperative projects.
  • Historical Context
    • Under the 2012 NIP (expired in October 2019), six new urea units were set up:
      • Four through joint ventures of nominated public sector undertakings
      • Two units by private companies

Significance of Cabinet Decisions

  • For Manufacturing Sector
    • Boost to indigenous manufacturing across critical sectors
    • Reduced import dependence for semiconductors, mobile phones, and urea
    • Job creation across multiple industries
    • Technology transfer and skill development opportunities
  • For Economic Growth
    • Massive investment inflows expected from these schemes
    • Export growth particularly in mobile phones and semiconductors
    • Multiplier effects on ancillary industries
    • Foreign exchange savings through import substitution
  • For Strategic Autonomy
    • Semiconductor self-reliance reducing geopolitical vulnerability
    • Fertiliser security critical for agricultural sector
    • Technology sovereignty in strategic sectors
    • Enhanced supply chain resilience
  • For Infrastructure
    • Improved connectivity in Varanasi with modern highway infrastructure
    • Reduced congestion and travel times
    • Alignment with PM Gati Shakti for integrated infrastructure development

Way Forward

  • For Semicon 2.0
    • Timely implementation of approved projects
    • Attracting global players and technology partners
    • Building a talent pool through education and training
    • Developing a supporting ecosystem for materials and equipment
  • For Mobile Manufacturing
    • Strengthening the domestic component ecosystem
    • Encouraging Indian brands to scale globally
    • R&D investments for innovation
    • Export market development
  • For Urea Production
    • Ensuring the timely commissioning of new plants
    • Gas supply security for the plants
    • Efficiency improvements in existing units
    • Promoting balanced fertiliser use
  • For Highway Projects
    • Adherence to timelines and quality standards
    • Environmental safeguards during construction
    • Integration with other transport modes
    • Sustainable maintenance frameworks

 

Polity & Governance

Article
16 Jul 2026

Ladakh's Seven Hill Councils: A New Political Debate

Why in news?

The Ladakh administration has announced the constitution of an Autonomous Hill Development Council (AHDC) in each of the Union Territory's seven districts.

This has reopened debate over how political power should be distributed in the region, with civil society groups opposing the move even as they support decentralised governance.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What Has Been Announced?
  • Why Does Ladakh Need Decentralisation?
  • Opposition From Civil Society Groups
  • Roots of the Trust Deficit
  • How Powerful Are the Hill Councils?
  • Comparison with Similar Bodies

What Has Been Announced?

  • Recently, the Ladakh administration announced an AHDC for each of its seven districts.
  • Earlier, such councils existed only in Leh and Kargil. The move follows the creation of five new districts, Drass, Sham, Nubra, Changthang and Zanskar, in April 2026.
  • Govt officials called this a step towards democratic decentralisation.
  • They also said the Centre and Ladakh had broadly agreed on a Union Territory-level representative body under a customised Article 371 framework, with legislative, executive, financial and administrative powers.
  • The administration argues both moves are complementary. Section 3 of the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council Act allows a council in every district.

Why Does Ladakh Need Decentralisation?

  • Ladakh is India's largest Union Territory by area, spread across nearly 60,000 sq km, but has barely 3 lakh people, making it one of the least densely populated regions in the country.
  • Villages are often separated by mountain passes and long travel times, which has made decentralised administration a long-standing demand.

Opposition From Civil Society Groups

  • Two civil society groups, the Apex Body, Leh (ABL) and the Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA), are negotiating Ladakh's political future with the Centre.
  • Neither disputes the need for decentralised administration. Their objection is to the fragmentation of political authority while talks on a representative framework under Article 371 are still underway.
  • Key concerns raised
    • Empowering seven district councils could leave little real authority with the future Article 371 representative body.
    • The move is "maximum government and minimum governance," since even existing councils have steadily lost power.
    • Ladakh leaders say the seven-council proposal appeared in the Minutes of a May 22 Centre-Ladakh meeting, which they refused to sign.
    • A revised version without the proposal was then signed. They allege the Centre proceeded without consulting them.
  • The broader worry is institutional overlap. Once seven hill councils, Panchayati Raj bodies, the UT administration, and a future Article 371 body all coexist, lines of accountability may blur.

Roots of the Trust Deficit

  • Opposition to the current move is embedded in a wider trust deficit between Ladakh's civil society and the Centre since Union Territory status in 2019:
    • Ladakh, unlike Jammu and Kashmir, was not given a legislature, causing early disappointment.
    • Talks on Sixth Schedule-like safeguards and an Article 371 framework have moved slowly.
    • Relations worsened after the September 2025 Leh protests, the detention of activist Sonam Wangchuk under the National Security Act, and remarks seen locally as questioning Ladakh's loyalty.
    • The emergence of the Voice of Buddhist Ladakh added to mistrust, with ABL alleging it was encouraged to split the joint Leh-Kargil movement.
    • The April creation of five new districts drew criticism from KDA, which alleged the new map favoured Buddhist-majority areas.

How Powerful Are the Hill Councils?

  • On paper, LAHDCs are among India's more powerful statutory district bodies.
  • Under the 1997 Act, they handle district planning, budgets, development schemes, management of council land, and collection of local taxes.
  • In practice, though, elected representatives across parties say the councils have lost relevance since UT status.
  • Decision-making has reportedly shifted to the Lieutenant Governor's secretariat, land recommendations are often ignored, and council budgets and staff have been reduced.
  • This creates a paradox: the government wants to increase councils from two to seven, while representatives say the existing ones need to be made functional first.

Comparison with Similar Bodies

  • LAHDCs sit in a middle position within India's federal set-up:
    • Sixth Schedule councils (Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura) enjoy constitutional status, independent legislative powers, and judicial authority over customary matters, subject to the Governor's assent.
    • LAHDCs have none of these constitutional protections.
    • They are closer to statutory autonomous councils like those in Manipur, which despite having significant powers on paper, face financial dependence on the state government and limited real control.

Conclusion

  • Ladakh's seven-council plan exposes a deeper question: does democratic authority sit in multiple district bodies or a unified Article 371 framework?
  • Until this is resolved, and existing councils are made functional, decentralisation reforms will remain entangled in an unresolved trust deficit between Ladakh and the Centre.
Polity & Governance

Article
16 Jul 2026

India-UK Trade Deal: What It Means for the Economy

Why in news?

The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) came into effect on July 15, 2026, a year after it was signed.

Alongside it, the Double Contribution Convention (DCC) also became operational. This is India's first comprehensive trade deal with a developed country and is being called the "gold standard" of India's FTAs. It also lays the groundwork for India's ongoing negotiations with the European Union.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Scale and Coverage of the Deal
  • Gains for India
  • The Double Contribution Convention (DCC): A Major Win for Workers
  • Gains for the UK and Consumers
  • Customs Reform: A Notable First
  • Remaining Challenges
  • Conclusion

Scale and Coverage of the Deal

  • The CETA is notable for both its breadth and depth, covering tariff and non-tariff issues across 30 chapters, including digital trade, government procurement, MSMEs, innovation, labour, environment, and gender.
  • It also addresses non-tariff barriers such as Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS) and Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT).
  • Overall tariff elimination
    • India has reduced tariffs on around 90% of products.
    • The UK has eliminated tariffs on 99% of Indian exports.
    • On implementation, the UK immediately eliminated tariffs on 96.8% of its tariff lines, covering 97.7% of trade value.
      • Including quota-based reductions, this rises to 98.8% of tariff lines and 99.5% of trade value.
    • India will immediately eliminate tariffs on 30.3% of trade value, with a further 47% phased out over time, and 12.1% covered under quota-based reductions.
      • In total, this covers 89.5% of tariff lines and 89.4% of trade value.

Gains for India

  • Export boost for labour-intensive sectors: Textiles, footwear, and gems and jewellery are expected to benefit.
    • Indian textile exports currently face UK tariffs of up to 10%; their removal could level the playing field against competitors like Bangladesh.
    • Duties on gems and jewellery (up to 12%) and footwear (up to 16%) have been eliminated.
  • Steel exports: UK-allocated quotas are expected to push India's iron and steel exports from around $850 million to over $1 billion. UK curbs on steel imports had been a major sticking point before the deal.
  • Services sector access: The UK has granted commercial presence rights to Indian firms in computer services, consultancy, and environmental services, allowing them to set up branches or subsidiaries in the UK.
  • Non-binding labour and environment chapter: Experts view this as a win for India, since strong labour and environment norms in Western countries often act as non-tariff barriers for developing-country exporters.
  • Government procurement access: Indian suppliers get legal access to the UK's Central government procurement market, worth around £90 billion ($122 billion), while India offers reciprocal access worth about $114 billion.
    • UK firms, however, can participate only as Class-II local suppliers, while Indian suppliers retain Class-I preference in the UK.

The Double Contribution Convention (DCC): A Major Win for Workers

  • The DCC addresses a long-standing problem: Indian workers in the UK were paying social security in both countries, even though UK benefits require 10 years of contributions, well beyond the typical 5-year stay of most Indian workers.
  • Under the DCC, Indian workers and their employers are exempted from UK social security contributions for five years, provided they continue paying in India.
  • This benefits roughly 75,000 Indian professionals and over 900 firms.
  • About 90% of Indian workers in the UK will save close to 23% of their salaries that would otherwise go toward UK social security.
  • Importantly, the DCC is not applicable to Indians who were already working in the UK before July 15, 2026.

Gains for the UK and Consumers

  • Cheaper imports for Indian consumers: Tariffs on British cars, scotch whisky, chocolates, cosmetics, and sports equipment have been reduced or removed.
  • Automobile tariffs (a first for India in any FTA):Tariffs on British cars cut from up to 110% to 30% in year one, falling to 10% by year five. Annual import quota starts at 20,000 vehicles, rising to 37,000 by year five, before tapering to 15,000 by year fifteen and beyond.
    • Separate quotas and tariffs apply to alternative fuel and commercial vehicles.
  • Alcohol concessions: Tariffs on British alcoholic beverages cut from 150% to 75% initially, falling further to 40% by year ten, a significant concession given India's large and fast-growing spirits market and the UK's position as the world's largest whisky exporter.
  • Services access for UK firms: India has opened key sectors, accounting, auditing, financial services, telecom, and environmental services, to UK firms without requiring local presence.
    • India has also agreed to recognise UK professional qualifications in law and accounting.

Customs Reform: A Notable First

  • For the first time in an Indian FTA, exporters and producers in the UK can self-declare the origin of goods, replacing the traditional system of certificates from designated authorities.
  • Experts believe this could set a precedent for future deals with developed economies like the EU and US, and supports India's broader push to reduce reliance on Chinese and ASEAN suppliers.
  • Notably, tariffs on UK medical devices (up to 14%) have also been removed, addressing India's dependence on Chinese medical equipment.

Remaining Challenges

  • Despite the gains, India did not secure an exemption from the UK's proposed Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), a carbon pricing framework for imported carbon-intensive goods, set to take effect from January 1, 2027.
  • This remains a concern for India's export-oriented industries.

Conclusion

The India-UK CETA marks a watershed in India's trade diplomacy, its first comprehensive deal with a developed economy. While it opens new export opportunities and eases the burden on Indian workers abroad, unresolved issues like CBAM show that deeper integration with developed economies still carries unfinished business.

International Relations

Article
16 Jul 2026

The Crisis at the Heart of Non-Proliferation

Context:

  • The Iran nuclear standoff has reopened a long-standing debate on the fairness of the global non-proliferation order.
  • As talks in Doha struggle over frozen assets and verification issues, Iran is being asked to fully dismantle its enriched uranium stockpile, even though President Pezeshkian maintains that enrichment is Iran's sovereign right.
  • The five recognised nuclear powers, and Israel too, face no similar demand to disarm.
  • In this context, this article argues that the non-proliferation regime punishes compliance while rewarding defiance.
  • It examines the unequal application of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the collapse of the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA), and the broader debate over fairness, disarmament and the credibility of the existing international nuclear order.

The Core Question

  • Why must Iran give up a capability that nine nuclear states already hold?
  • Analysts say the claim that Iran is "uniquely dangerous" is not backed by evidence.
  • It is a conclusion states reach first and justify later, especially states whose own record on international law is inconsistent.

Unequal Rules Under the NPT

  • The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) was meant to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Instead, it froze an unequal hierarchy in place.
  • It split the world into nuclear "haves" and "have-nots." Have-nots must show restraint. Haves keep modernising their arsenals.
  • This double standard plays out clearly in practice:
    • India and Pakistan stay outside the NPT, hold real nuclear arsenals, and are still treated as strategic partners by major powers.
    • Israel has never allowed inspections of its widely known nuclear programme and is rarely named as a proliferation risk.
    • Iran, by contrast, enriched uranium within a legal framework, accepted the most intrusive inspections in arms control history under the JCPOA, and was still hit with sanctions after U.S. withdrawal from the deal.

Hiroshima and the Question of Moral Authority

  • As per the experts, the origin of today's nuclear order lies in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, the only wartime use of nuclear weapons in history.
  • That act set two precedents: it showed the devastating power of these weapons, and it showed that their use could be absorbed into the language of "strategic necessity."
  • The state that used them became the very state that now polices nuclear order elsewhere. This complicates any moral claim to regulate others' nuclear ambitions.

The JCPOA's Collapse and Its Lesson

  • The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), negotiated under the Obama administration, was a genuine diplomatic achievement.
  • Its abandonment by the Trump administration in 2018 sent a clear signal to every state watching: agreements with the U.S. carry no guarantee of lasting compliance.
  • This collapse is responsible for deepening the current crisis.
  • The real issue is not whether Iran should enrich uranium. It is whether the framework judging that question is fair to begin with.
  • The call for total nuclear abolition dates back to the 1955 Einstein-Russell declaration, which warned that deterrence logic will eventually produce the catastrophe it claims to prevent.

Conclusion

  • The non-proliferation order rewards power, not principle. Iran's compliance was punished; others' defiance was tolerated.
  • Until disarmament obligations bind all states equally, the choice before the world remains stark: confront nuclear hierarchy through honest policy reform, or wait for catastrophe to force the reckoning.
Editorial Analysis

Article
16 Jul 2026

One Nation, One Election - Constitutional Reform or Misplaced Priority?

Context:

  • The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill seeks to implement One Nation, One Election (ONOE) by synchronising elections to the Lok Sabha and all State Legislative Assemblies.
  • This will be done through the insertion of Article 82A and amendments to Articles 83 and 172.
  • The proposal, based on the recommendations of the High-Level Committee (HLC) chaired by former President Ram Nath Kovind, requires a two-thirds majority in Parliament and ratification by at least half of the States.
  • Hence, there is the need to critically evaluate the government's rationale and highlight constitutional, political, and economic concerns.

Government's Rationale for ONOE: The HLC justifies simultaneous elections on four major grounds -

  • Reduction in election expenditure.
  • Minimising policy paralysis caused by the Model Code of Conduct (MCC).
  • Lower administrative and security burden.
  • Higher economic growth, citing research claiming that GDP growth is around 1.5 percentage points higher during simultaneous election cycles.

Questioning the Economic Growth Argument:

  • Historical evidence contradicts the claim:
    • India's period of simultaneous elections (1952–1967) coincided with the "Hindu Rate of Growth" (~3.5% annually), characterised by licence raj, import substitution, and closed economy.
    • India's highest growth phase (2003–2011) occurred during staggered elections, with GDP growth of 8–9%.
  • Methodological concerns:
    • The cited research may not adequately account for major growth drivers such as 1991 economic reforms, trade liberalisation, IT revolution, global capital inflows, and financial sector development.
    • Further, the reported growth appears partly driven by higher fiscal deficits, and increased government expenditure.
    • This raises the possibility of a political business cycle rather than sustainable structural growth.

Election Expenditure - Does ONOE Reduce Costs?

  • Limited government spending: Election expenditure by the government constitutes less than 0.1% of the Union Budget, according to Election Commission of India (ECI) accounts.
  • The real issue - Black money:
    • Candidates officially report spending only about 50% of the permissible expenditure limit. This suggests substantial unaccounted election financing.
    • The Centre for Media Studies (CMS) estimates that the 2024 Lok Sabha election involved over ₹1 lakh crore in expenditure, much of it believed to be unaccounted.
  • Hence, ONOE merely concentrates election expenditure rather than reducing the role of black money or campaign financing.

MCC - Problem Shifted, Not Solved:

  • Currently, different states remain under MCC for nearly four months annually due to staggered elections.
  • Under ONOE, the MCC would apply simultaneously across the country, and developmental announcements would be suspended nationwide during one large election period.
  • Thus, governance disruption is concentrated rather than eliminated, making the claim of ending "policy paralysis" questionable.

Constitutional and Democratic Concerns:

  • Impact on parliamentary democracy:
    • The Kesavananda Bharati judgment recognised parliamentary democracy and free and fair elections as part of the Basic Structure.
    • Challenge: If a government loses its majority before the common election cycle, it cannot continue without democratic legitimacy, and frequent President's Rule would undermine federalism.
    • Constructive no-confidence motion: The HLC proposes adopting Germany's model, where a no-confidence motion must simultaneously elect an alternative government.
    • Critics argue this: Alters India's parliamentary tradition. Enables weak minority governments to remain in office.
  • Fixed synchronisation requires altering assembly tenures:
    • Achieving the first synchronised cycle would require extending some Assemblies, while curtailing others.
    • However, Articles 83 and 172 limit legislative tenure to five years. Extension without elections violates the electorate's mandate. Premature dissolution shortens the tenure voters approved.
    • Hence, both options compromise democratic legitimacy.
  • Threat to federalism and regional parties:
    • Research indicates a "wave effect" - Simultaneous elections encourage voters to support the same party at both national and state levels.
    • Potential consequences:
      • Electoral advantage for large national parties.
      • Weakening of regional parties.
      • Reduced attention to state-specific issues such as agrarian distress, coastal livelihoods, flood management, and regional development priorities.
    • This may dilute India's cooperative federal structure.

Ignoring Local Government Elections:

  • The proposal excludes elections to the Panchayats, and the Urban Local Bodies.
  • These are constitutionally protected under the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments.
  • Key concerns:
    • Local body elections remain under State Election Commissions, not the ECI.
    • Municipal corporations such as Mumbai, Pune, and Bengaluru manage budgets exceeding those of several states.
    • Separate local elections would continue to involve administrative deployment, security arrangements, and governance disruptions.
  • Therefore, many projected efficiency gains remain unrealised.

Reforms Needed Instead of ONOE:

  • India's electoral challenges lie elsewhere and can be addressed without major constitutional amendments.
  • Reforms needed:
    • Transparent disclosure of political donations.
    • Strict enforcement of expenditure limits.
    • Disqualification of criminally tainted candidates.
    • Strengthening the independence and autonomy of the Election Commission of India.
    • Measures to curb black money, vote-buying, and misuse of state machinery.

Conclusion:

  • The proposed One Nation, One Election framework primarily reorganises India's electoral calendar without addressing the structural weaknesses of the electoral system.
  • The anticipated gains remain uncertain, while the proposal raises significant concerns.
  • Hence, strengthening electoral integrity through targeted reforms would be a more effective and constitutionally sound approach than undertaking a far-reaching constitutional restructuring.
Editorial Analysis

Article
16 Jul 2026

Iran’s Disruptive Strategy, Its Global Consequences

Context

  • Iran's recent actions in the Strait of Hormuz have intensified concerns over regional stability, global energy security, and the future of West Asian geopolitics.
  • While these actions may have delivered short-term tactical gains, they risk becoming long-term strategic failures by deepening Iran's international isolation, weakening its economy, and straining relations with neighbouring Gulf states.
  • In contrast, India's emphasis on multilateralism and diplomacy demonstrates a more sustainable approach to achieving influence in international affairs.

A Strategy of Disruption

  • Since the Iran-Iraq War, Iran has projected itself as a champion of Islamic resistance against Western influence and Israel.
  • This ideological position evolved into support for proxy organisations such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis, collectively known as the Axis of Resistance.
  • Through these groups, Iran expanded its regional influence without engaging directly in large-scale military confrontations.
  • Although this strategy created significant operational success by challenging adversaries and maintaining pressure on the United States and Israel, it also widened Iran's diplomatic isolation.
  • Today, its closest strategic partners remain Russia, China, and North Korea, reflecting a foreign policy centred on confrontation rather than cooperation.
  • Tactical victories have therefore come at the cost of reduced international legitimacy, weaker economic integration, and limited opportunities for long-term development.

India's Approach

  • India has maintained a pragmatic relationship with Iran based on energy security, trade, and the Chabahar Port while carefully balancing its broader foreign policy interests.
  • Even during periods of Western sanctions, India protected its national interests by maintaining limited energy imports before gradually diversifying its oil sources.
  • During the recent regional crisis, India adopted a policy of strategic restraint, avoiding direct mediation while encouraging dialogue through quiet diplomacy.
  • Its support for UN Security Council Resolution 2817, which condemned attacks on Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and international shipping, reflected its commitment to international law and maritime security.
  • This balanced approach aligns with India's vision of a multipolar world, where disputes are addressed through cooperation and consensus rather than military confrontation.

Regional Consequences

  • Iran's attacks on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and its proposal to impose preferential transit rates for selected countries represent a policy of coercive brinkmanship.
  • Such actions threaten one of the world's most important maritime trade routes, creating uncertainty for oil-importing nations and disrupting global commerce.
  • Countries such as India, whose economic growth depends heavily on uninterrupted energy supplies and secure trade corridors, are particularly vulnerable to prolonged instability in the region.
  • Domestically, Iran has emerged from recent conflicts politically hardened. The growing influence of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and conservative clerics suggests that future policies may continue to favour limited confrontation below the threshold of full-scale war.
  • This environment reduces prospects for moderation while increasing the risk of recurring regional tensions.

The Choice Before Iran

  • Iran possesses significant economic potential as an upper-middle-income economy with vast energy resources.
  • Opportunities such as the de-freezing of assets, expanding oil exports, and greater participation in global markets could generate sustained economic growth and improve the welfare of its citizens.
  • Achieving these goals, however, requires replacing confrontation with diplomatic engagement.
  • Continued reliance on proxy warfare, coercive tactics, and threats to international navigation will likely prolong economic isolation and discourage foreign investment.
  • Greater cooperation with the international community would strengthen regional stability while enabling Iran to benefit from expanded trade and energy partnerships.

Conclusion

  • Iran stands at a critical crossroads between continued confrontation and constructive engagement.
  • While its recent military actions have demonstrated tactical capability, they have also increased diplomatic isolation, economic uncertainty, and regional instability.
  • Lasting national progress depends not on coercion but on economic integration, international cooperation, and responsible diplomacy.
  • Compared with Iran's disruptive strategy, India's commitment to dialogue, consensus, and strategic autonomy offers a more effective model for navigating an increasingly interconnected and multipolar world.

 

Editorial Analysis

Current Affairs
July 15, 2026

Periyar Tiger Reserve (PTR)
A conservation initiative in Periyar Tiger Reserve (PTR) seeks to demonstrate how the management of invasive species can protect biodiversity while simultaneously improving livelihoods of local populations.
current affairs image

About Periyar Tiger Reserve (PTR):

  • It is located in Kerala.
  • It is set high at Cardamom Hills and Pandalam Hills of the Western Ghats, adjacent to the border with Tamil Nadu.
  • It surrounds the Periyar Lake, which was created in 1895 by building a dam across the Periyar River.
  • Rivers: Two major rivers, namely Periyar and Pamba, drain the area.
  • Dams: Mullaperiyar Dam is located within the PTR.
  • Tribes: It is home to many tribal communities, including the Mannans and the Palians.
  • Vegetation: It mainly comprises tropical evergreen forests, semi- evergreen forests, moist deciduous forests, transitional fringe evergreen forests, grasslands, and eucalyptus plantations.
  • Flora: It includes Banyan, Sacred Fig, Teak, Royal Poinciana, Kino, Sandalwood, Rosewood, Mangoes, Bamboos, Jacarandas, Jamun, Tamarind, Gloriosa lily, and many more.
  • Fauna:
    • Several species of mammals are found here like Tiger, Gaur, Elephant, Sambar, Barking Deer, Indian Wild Dog, Mouse Deer, Wild Pig, Indian giant squirrel, Jungle cat, sloth bear, Nilgiri Tahr, ETC.
    • The major four species of primates are also found at Periyar – the rare lion-tailed macaque, the Nilgiri Langur, Gee’s Golden Langur, Common Langur, and Bonnet Macaque.
    • It is also being considered as the habitat of the elusive Nilgiri Tahr.
Environment

Current Affairs
July 15, 2026

What is Greater Sand Plover?
A Greater Sand Plover (Anarhynchus leschenaultii), a migratory shorebird typically found along coastal mudflats and estuaries, was recently spotted at Chandu village, marking the fifth documented record of the species in the region.
current affairs image

About Greater Sand Plover:

  • It is a small wader in the plover family of birds.
  • Scientific Name: Charadrius leschenaultii
  • Habitat and Distribution:
    • Found from Turkey to Jordon, Central Asia, Siberia, Mongolia, and northern China, wintering along the coasts of Africa, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, southern China, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Australasia.
    • It breeds in high-elevation areas, where it favors arid, open habitats, sometimes near water.
    • Winters on coastal mudflats and estuaries.
  • Conservation Status:
    • IUCN Red List: Least Concern
Environment

Current Affairs
July 15, 2026

What is Intron?
Scientists visually tracked an RNA intron jumping from a predator to its prey, revealing insights into gene transfer across species.
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About Intron:

  • In some genes, not all of the DNA sequence is used to make protein.
  • Introns are noncoding sections of an RNA transcript, or the DNA encoding it, that are spliced out before the RNA molecule is translated into a protein.
  • The sections of DNA (or RNA) that code for proteins are called exons.
  • Following transcription, new, immature strands of messenger RNA, called pre-mRNA, may contain both introns and exons.
  • The pre-mRNA molecule thus goes through a modification process in the nucleus called splicing during which the noncoding introns are cut out and only the coding exons remain.
  • Splicing produces a mature messenger RNA molecule that is then translated into a protein.
  • Introns are also referred to as intervening sequences.
  • The length of introns differs among species and genes in the same species; mammals and flowering plants have multiple introns and are longer than exons.
  • Introns may contain sequences that regulate how genes are expressed or transcribed and how mRNA is processed.
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