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Trump says preference is to solve Iran tensions through diplomacy

United States President Donald Trump has told Congress that he would prefer to resolve differences with Tehran through diplomacy, while laying out his case for potential attacks on Iran, which he claimed was seeking to develop missiles that could strike the US mainland.

In comments made during his annual State of the Union address to a joint session of the Senate and House of Representatives on Tuesday, Trump struck a belligerent tone against Iran, accusing it of working to rebuild its nuclear program that was hit by US strikes last year.

Trump has repeatedly said those sites were obliterated, a claim experts have disputed.

“We wiped it out and they want to start all over again. And they’re at this moment again pursuing their sinister ambitions,” Trump said, as he broached the subject of potential military action against Iran about 90 minutes into his record-length speech.

“We are in negotiations with them. They want to make a deal, but we haven’t heard those secret words: ‘We will never have a nuclear weapon.’”

Trump said his “preference” was “to solve this problem through diplomacy, but one thing is certain: I will never allow the world’s number one sponsor of terror, which they are by far, to have a nuclear weapon.

“Can’t let that happen,” he added.

Trump said that after the US attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites in June 2025, “they were warned to make no future attempts to rebuild their weapons programme, in particular, nuclear weapons – yet they continue.”

Iran has insisted for years that its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only. Neither US intelligence nor the UN’s nuclear watchdog found any evidence last year that Iran was pursuing atomic weapons.

As well as accusing Iran of restarting its nuclear programme, Trump claimed Tehran was working to build missiles that “soon” would be capable of reaching the US, echoing claims in Iranian state media that Tehran is developing a missile capable of reaching North America.

He also claimed Iran was responsible for roadside bombings that have killed US service members and civilians. He criticised Tehran over the deaths of thousands of protesters killed during recent antigovernment demonstrations.

“The (Iranian) regime and its murderous proxies have spread nothing but terrorism and death and hate,” Trump said.

Araghchi: Deal ‘within reach’

Trump’s latest comments on the tensions come amid a significant US military buildup in the Middle East, and before a third round of indirect talks scheduled for Thursday.

The talks, to be held in Geneva and mediated by Oman, will be attended by Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, along with Iranian officials.

Earlier on Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a post on X that a deal with Washington to avert conflict was “within reach”, as Iran prepared to resume talks in Geneva “with a determination to achieve a fair and equitable deal – in the shortest possible time”.

“Our fundamental convictions are crystal clear,” he wrote. “Iran will under no circumstances ever develop a nuclear weapon; neither will we Iranians ever forgo our right to harness the dividends of peaceful nuclear technology for our people.”

‘I’m proud of my heritage’ – meet Britain’s youngest F1 driver

Andrew Benson

F1 Correspondent
  • 29 Comments

Arvid Lindblad’s eyes light up. The 18-year-old who is about to become Britain’s youngest ever Formula 1 driver is sitting on a beach in Bahrain, a Gulf mist obscuring the still-rising sun, and he’s pondering a question.

He’s been polite but wary so far. A five-minute drive from the circuit where he and his Racing Bulls team are completing their preparations for his grand prix debut in Australia at the beginning of March. On the cusp of achieving his lifetime’s dream, understandably he wants to make sure he does not say anything he might regret.

But when he’s asked what has been the best thing that’s happened to him since he became an F1 driver, the joy inside him bubbles to the surface, and he can’t resist a little smile.

“Since becoming a Formula 1 driver… the best thing was just becoming a Formula 1 driver,” he says.

He learned about Red Bull’s decision to promote him to their second team at last year’s Qatar Grand Prix, where he was competing in the penultimate round of the Formula 2 championship.

The news was broken by Red Bull’s former motorsport adviser Helmut Marko, the veteran former F1 driver who had taken Lindblad into the company’s driver programme at the age of 13 as a promising go-karter.

“This is something I’ve been doing with my dad,” Lindblad says. “I got the news in Qatar when I was with him, so obviously that was a very special moment to share together.”

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Shaped by UK, Indian and Swedish heritage

Lindblad’s graduation to F1 this year is breaking new ground for the sport.

He is one of five British F1 drivers on the grid this year – six if you count Alex Albon, who was born and raised in the UK, but races under the Thai flag. He’s also the first Briton with Indian heritage to race at the highest level of the sport.

His father, Stefan, is Swedish. His mother, Anita, is of Indian descent. The partition of India in 1947 played a significant role in the family’s history.

“My Nani, my grandmother, is Sikh, grandfather’s Hindu,” Lindblad says. “And when they were five, they were involved in the partition.

“They were in the part of Punjab that is now Pakistan, and they had to leave. They came from quite well-off backgrounds, but then they lost everything. So then they had to work very hard their whole life to recreate a life for themselves. Then they moved to the UK in their late 20s, early 30s, as doctors.”

His family background is, he acknowledges, “quite a rare combination, but I’m very proud of my heritage. All three parts have really shaped me to who I am today”.

Arvid Lindblad pictured with his dad, Stefan, and his mum Anita, at the Autosport Awards in 2023Getty Images

Language skills have not passed down the generations as effectively as culture, though.

“I’m not the best at languages, to be honest. I can speak a little bit of Swedish and a few words of Hindi, but it’s not great,” Lindblad says.

“I couldn’t do an interview in another language, so it’s something I’m still working towards. I think it is important and it’s also an element of respect, but I’ve got some work to do.”

The interest in motorsport came from his father’s side of the family.

“My grandfather is a massive motorsports fan,” Lindblad says. “He’ll watch anything with wheels and an engine. He did a little bit of motocross with my dad when he was younger. Unfortunately, they couldn’t do it for very long, but he passed that passion down to my dad, who passed it on to me.

“When I was three, my dad got me a motocross bike. To be honest, it didn’t last very long. It was a bit too much for my mum to sit a little three-year-old on a motocross bike. So that died out quite quickly.

“But then when I was five I went karting for the first time and loved it from the beginning.

“But I’d say a big turning point for me that I remember very well was when I was about four. My dad was sitting on the sofa and had the F1 on and I came and sat down next to him and was watching the race and asking him, ‘Is it possible to be there? Could I? How does it work?’

“That was really the moment when I saw the cars and wanted to be there one day and that fuelled the start of the journey.”

He says he has been fixated on this moment from a very early age.

Arvid Lindblad driving the Racing Bulls during testing in BahrainPA Media

Lindblad was born and grew up in well-to-do Virginia Water in Surrey, and is the first to acknowledge that he has been helped on his way by the relative comfort of his background.

“I’m very fortunate to be able to do racing, because as everyone knows it’s not the most accessible sport to everyone,” he says.

“I’ve already touched on a bit my mum’s side, that they were very hard-working and they had to really fight for what they had.

“My grandmother retired as a doctor at 82, and my mum is very similar. Well, she’s not 82, but she has that very similar work ethic. And my dad even more so.

“He came from a small village in Sweden, where sometimes my grandparents struggled to put three meals on the table.

“He had his first job from when he was 11, trying to just do anything he could to get any pocket money. He funded himself through university and he’s worked really hard his whole life, and it’s a big reason why I’m able to do this and be here today.

“So I’m extremely thankful and grateful for that. But even more so I think I’m very lucky to come from a family where hard work, humility and all of those values are very important. That’s really something I try to show and act of as well.”

Arvid Lindblad celebrates a Formula 3 sprint race victory in Bahrain in 2024Getty Images

We’re talking at the plush hotel Racing Bulls have picked as their base for the two pre-season tests in Bahrain, which followed a ‘shakedown’ in Spain. It’s not long past 8am, and his next appointment is an engineering meeting, before going out on track later in the day.

Asked if he feels ready for the big time in F1, he says: “Yeah, I think so. Obviously, it’s a big step from F2, especially this year. There’s regulation changes and everything is very different.

“But I’ve been working really hard with the team on the sim (simulator) at the factory, obviously also trying to utilise these three tests that we have.

“That’s a big benefit for me this year. Normally, there’s only one, whereas this year there’s three. So that really helps me to get up to speed. I’m really trying to utilise these tests, and I’m looking forward to getting on track in Melbourne.”

Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane, who has worked with a multitude of top drivers, including Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso, has been full of praise so far.

“He’s done a fantastic job,” Permane says. “People often ask me, ‘What do you look for? What do you need in a young driver?’ And of course, the first thing you need is for them to be quick. We’re very comfortable with that, we know he’s got the speed.

“But also on top of that, he’s bringing lots of inquisitiveness, he’s asking many questions, his debriefs are great, he’s doing everything we ask of him at the moment.”

F1 is a brutal business, with little sentiment. Drivers either achieve or they’re out. And nowhere is more ruthless than Red Bull.

You might expect Lindblad to be feeling a little pressure mixed in with the obvious excitement. But he says not.

“I wouldn’t really say pressure,” he says. “If I’m being honest, this is what I’ve worked towards my whole life.

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Key takeaways from Trump’s State of the Union speech

United States President Donald Trump delivered the longest State of the Union address in history on Tuesday night, covering an array of his policies on the US economy, crime, trade, immigration and foreign policy, all of which he said contributed to a “turnaround for the ages”.

The first such address of his second term lasted 1-hour, 48-minutes, which surpassed the record of 1 hour and 28 minutes set by former President Bill Clinton in 2000.

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“Our nation is back: bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before,” Trump said, at the start of his speech.

He ended the address with a similar sentiment: “Our future will be bigger, better, brighter, bolder and more glorious than ever before.”

It remains to be seen how the sentiment will resonate with voters, as the president has seen his approval rating slump in recent weeks to the lowest since his second term began.

It also remained unclear if Trump’s claims of success would give the Republican Party the bump it needs to hold on to control of the US House of Representatives and Senate in the midterm elections in November, which will greatly determine his ability to enact his agenda in the years ahead.

Here were some key moments from the speech:

Trump says the economy is ‘roaring’

One of the main goals of Trump’s speech was to sell his stewardship of the US economy, which has been a mixed bag over the last 13 months.

Trump pointed to Wall Street’s continued strength and strong job numbers, but glossed over the economy’s slower-than-expected growth in 2025.

While inflation has eased somewhat, it has not quite “plummeted” as Trump said. For example, January data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed food prices were still 2.9 percent higher than the same period last year.

The president then turned to the issue of “affordability”, which has proven a challenging subject for him. Polls have shown a decline in confidence in Trump’s leadership on the economy, with many US citizens still experiencing high living costs.

Trump largely blamed the affordability issues on Democrats, including former President Joe Biden, whose term ended over a year ago when Trump took office.

“Their policies created the high prices; our policies are rapidly ending them,” Trump said.

Trump also hailed his TrumpRx website, which offers people without insurance potentially cheaper medications online.

He said he had struck a deal with tech companies to keep utility bills low, despite the demands of AI data centres. He also pointed to an executive order limiting Wall Street investment firms from buying single-family homes in bulk.

President remains defiant after tariff ruling

Trump has remained defiant after the US Supreme Court ruled last week that large portions of the reciprocal tariffs he announced last year were illegal.

The ruling was the most substantial setback from the Supreme Court for any of Trump’s policies.

“Just four days ago, an unfortunate ruling from the United States Supreme Court, it just came down; very unfortunate ruling,” said Trump.

He greeted the four Supreme Court justices in attendance, including his appointees Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, as he entered the chamber.

On Tuesday, a new set of global tariffs of 10 percent went into effect under what Trump described as “fully approved and tested alternative legal statutes”. Trump has said he wants to increase these to 15 percent.

He added that “congressional action will not be necessary” to keep the tariffs in place.

Democrats protest Trump’s immigration policies

Trump focused heavily on his hardline immigration policies, particularly when it came to his closure of the US border.

He continually connected migration to higher crime rates, although studies have shown migrants commit crimes at a lower rate than US citizens.

Trump again alleged rampant fraud in the Somali-American community, referring to “the Somali pirates who ransacked Minnesota”.

Trump also asked those in attendance to stand if they agreed that “the first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens”.

That prompted heckles from Democrats Ilhan Omar, who is Somali American, and Rashida Tlaib, who is Palestinian American.

“You have killed Americans,” Omar, who represents a district in the state of Minnesota where two US citizens were killed in January by immigration agents, yelled.

Earlier in the night, Representative Al Green was escorted from the chamber after he held up a protest sign referring to a racist video posted on Trump’s Truth Social account depicting former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, as apes.

Beyond the policy arguments on the economy and immigration, Trump leaned into a highly partisan appeal for Republican control of Congress.

He framed the upcoming midterms as a rescue mission; he labelled Democratic lawmakers “crazy” and accused them of “destroying this country,” claiming his administration had intervened “just in the nick of time”.

Throughout the address, he repeatedly cast his political opponents as anti-American actors working against the nation’s best interests.

Trump says Iran won’t commit to no nuclear weapons

The president addressed tensions with Iran amid the largest US military build-up in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

He again claimed that US strikes last year had “obliterated Iran’s nuclear weapons programme”, just days after US envoy Steve Witkoff said Iran could be a “week away” from developing nuclear weapons.

Trump has upped threats against Iran amid the latest crackdown on protesters in the country, although he said he preferred to find a diplomatic solution.

“We haven’t heard those secret words: ‘We will never have a nuclear weapon,’’’ Trump said.

Iran’s top diplomat, Abbas Araghchi, in a post on X hours before Trump’s speech, said that “Iran will under no circumstances develop a nuclear weapon”. Iranian officials have repeatedly denied seeking nuclear weapons.

Trump also claimed that Iran was “working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States of America”.

Made-for-television moments

Trump built his career in reality television, and his eye for camera-ready moments was clear during the speech.

At one point, Trump referenced the US abduction of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, which he hailed as a “colossal victory for the security of the United States”. He added the US had “received from our new friend and partner, Venezuela, more than 80 million barrels of oil”.

The US president then introduced Venezuelan opposition lawmaker Enrique Marquez, who had been released from prison by the government of Delcy Rodriguez shortly after Maduro’s abduction.

“Alejandra,” Trump said to a woman he identified as Marquez’s niece, “I’m pleased to inform you that not only has your uncle been released, but he is here tonight. We brought him over to celebrate his freedom with you in person.”

Trump also awarded Chief Warrant Officer Eric Slover, who was wounded in the Maduro abduction raid, the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Earlier in the night, Trump awarded the goaltender of the US men’s hockey team, Connor Hellebuyck, with the country’s highest civilian honour, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Trump had invited the team, which won gold over Canada at the Olympics, to the speech as his guests.

Democrats’ response

Dozens of Democrats boycotted Trump’s speech and attended counterprogramming instead.

The party’s official rebuttal was delivered by Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger.

Spanberger said US businesses suffer under Trump’s tariffs, communities live under his mass deportation drive and residents remain dogged by affordability issues.

Trump says US has received 80m barrels of Venezuelan oil; 3rd tanker seized

President Donald Trump has said the United States has received “more than 80 million barrels of oil” from Venezuela, hours after the Pentagon said US forces had “captured” a third “sanctioned” oil tanker in the Indian Ocean.

“We just received from our new friend and partner, Venezuela, more than 80 million barrels of oil,” Trump announced during his State of the Union address in Washington, DC, on Tuesday night.

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“American oil production is up by more than 600,000 barrels a day,” said Trump, who reiterated his promise to “drill, baby, drill” for oil as president.

Trump’s lauding of growth in the US oil sector comes after he sent special forces to conduct a bloody raid on Caracas in January and abduct Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, who had warned that Washington’s animosity towards his government was a pretext for the US to seize Venezuelan oil reserves.

The Trump administration has since promised to open up Venezuela’s oil industry to US oil companies, including Chevron, Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips, which were among several oil companies Trump hosted at the White House for a meeting about the South American country’s oil on January 9, just days after Maduro was abducted to the US.

IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR FOSSIL FREE MEDIA - On the evening before President Donald Trump is set to meet with U.S. oil executives to discuss Venezuela, activists staged a large-scale projection opposing oil-driven intervention and the use of U.S. taxpayer dollars to subsidize Big Oil, on January 8, 2026 in Washington. (Michael A. McCoy/AP Content Services for Fossil Free Media)
Activists stage a large-scale projection opposing Trump’s oil-driven intervention in Venezuela and the use of US taxpayer dollars to subsidise Big Oil, on January 8, 2026, in Washington, DC [Handout/Fossil Free Media via AP]

Trump’s comments followed after the Pentagon said earlier on Tuesday that US forces had boarded another oil tanker in the Indian Ocean linked to Venezuela.

“Three boats ran and now all three have been captured,” the US Department of Defense wrote in a post on social media, which also included a video showing weapons directed towards a ship as it was boarded by troops descending from two helicopters.

The post did not specify which country the vessel, known as Bertha, had come from, but said US forces had tracked the tanker “from the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean”.

Samir Madani, a cofounder of oil tanker monitoring site TankerTrackers.com, said Bertha was one of the 16 oil tankers to have fled the Venezuelan coast after US forces abducted Maduro on January 3, according to The Associated Press news agency.

Madani told AP on Tuesday that the Bertha was laden with 1.9 million barrels of Merey 16 crude, which is a grade of Venezuelan oil.

The Bertha was flagged to the Cook Islands when it was placed under US sanctions related to Iran, according to the website of the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.

However, the vessel was more recently listed under a false flag of the Caribbean island of Curacao and managed by a company in China, according to Equasis, a shipping information system.

The latest developments come as the Trump administration continues to expand oil extraction in the US and abroad, including in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

India’s Modi visits Israel: What’s on the agenda, and why it matters

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will begin a two-day visit to Israel on Wednesday. Modi’s first trip to Israel was in 2017, when he was the first Indian leader to ever visit the country.

India was among the countries that opposed the creation of Israel in 1948, and for decades was one of the most forceful non-Arab critics of Israel’s policies towards Palestinians. It only established diplomatic ties with Israel in 1992, but since 2014, when Modi came to power, relations between the two countries have flourished.

Here is more about what is on the agenda for Modi’s visit, and why it is significant.

Who will Modi meet, and what will they talk about?

Modi is expected to land at the Ben Gurion international airport outside Tel Aviv at 12:45pm local time (10:45 GMT).

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to welcome Modi at the airport, as he did during the Indian premier’s 2017 visit. The two leaders are scheduled to hold talks shortly after.

Then, at 4:30pm (14:30 GMT), Modi is scheduled to address the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem. He then returns to Tel Aviv for the night.

On the morning of February 26, Modi is scheduled to visit the Yad Vashem museum, a memorial to Holocaust victims, before meeting Israeli President Isaac Herzog. Modi and Netanyahu will then meet again and oversee the signing of agreements between the two countries, before Modi departs Israel in the afternoon.

Overall, Modi and Netanyahu aim to use this visit to bolster strategic economic and defence agreements between India and Israel, officials from both sides have said.

“We don’t compete, we rather complement each other,” JP Singh, India’s ambassador to Israel, told state broadcaster All India Radio on Monday, speaking of relations with Israel. “Israel is really good at innovation, science and technology. Therefore, there will be a lot of discussion on AI, cybersecurity and quantum.”

The two countries signed a new Bilateral Investment Treaty in September last year, replacing the 1996 investment treaty, to provide “certainty and protection” to investors from both countries. They are also aiming to upgrade existing bilateral security agreements at this meeting.

In a video posted on the Israeli Embassy’s social media channels on Monday, Israel’s ambassador to India, Reuven Azar, said: “Our economic partnership is gaining real momentum. We signed a bilateral investment treaty, and we are moving forward to sign a free trade agreement, hopefully this year.”

Azar said that Israel wants to encourage Indian infrastructure companies to come to Israel to build and invest in the country.

He added: “We will deepen our defence relationship by updating our security agreements.”

In an X post of his own on Sunday, Netanyahu wrote that he is looking forward to greeting Modi in Jerusalem.

“We are partners in innovation, security, and a shared strategic vision. Together, we are building an axis of nations committed to stability and progress,” he wrote.

“From AI to regional cooperation, our partnership continues to reach new heights,” Netanyahu added.

How are India-Israel relations?

Relations between India and Israel have improved exponentially over the years. While still under British rule in the 1920s and 1930s, India strongly identified with the Palestinian struggle for independence.

In 1917, the United Kingdom signed the Balfour Declaration, promising Jews who had been displaced from Europe due to Adolf Hitler’s oppression a homeland in the British Mandate in Palestine. This was opposed by many nations, including India, which was fighting British colonialism at the time.

“Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England belongs to the English, or France to the French,” Mahatma Gandhi, India’s most prominent freedom fighter who is revered as the father of the nation, wrote in an article in his weekly newspaper Harijan on November 26, 1938.

India was among the nations opposed to the creation of Israel in 1948. In 1949, India also voted against Israel’s UN membership. While it recognised Israel as a state in 1950, it was not until 1992 that the two formalised diplomatic relations, and economic relations gradually grew over the following two decades.

Since Modi became India’s leader in 2014, there has been a major shift in the relationship between India and Israel. Nine years ago, Modi was the first Indian prime minister ever to visit Israel.

India is currently Israel’s second-largest trading partner in Asia, after China. According to India’s Ministry of External Affairs, trade jumped from $200m in 1992 to $6.5bn in 2024.

India’s main exports to Israel include pearls, precious stones, automotive diesel, chemicals, machinery, and electrical equipment; imports include petroleum, chemical machinery and transport equipment.

Azad Essa, a senior reporter at Middle East Eye and author of the 2023 book Hostile Homelands: The New Alliance Between India and Israel, told Al Jazeera that Modi’s visit to Israel shows how far India’s relations with Israel have evolved over the past decade.

“Whereas a partnership existed, it was a lot more limited prior to Modi. [New] Delhi has now emerged as Israel’s strongest non-Western ally, so much so that it is now considered a ‘special relationship’, rooted in strategic cooperation and ideological convergence,” Essa said.

“This visit will be Netanyahu’s opportunity to offer appreciation to Modi, and will be used by him to show Israelis that he is a well-respected and popular leader in the Global South.”

Under Modi, India has become Israel’s top arms customer. And in 2024, during Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, Indian arms firms supplied Israel with rockets and explosives, according to an Al Jazeera investigation.

Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) envisions India as a Hindu homeland, echoing Israel’s self-image as a Jewish state. Both India and Israel frame “Islamic terrorism” as a key threat, a label critics say is used to justify wider anti-Muslim policies.

“The alliance between India and Israel is not just about weapon sales or trade. It is about India’s open embrace of authoritarianism and militarism in building a supremacist state in Israel’s image,” Essa said.

“It is also a story about how security, nationalism and democratic language can be used to justify and normalise increasingly illiberal policies, and this has implications for democracies everywhere.”

Why is this visit significant?

Modi’s visit comes at a time of rising and complex geopolitical tensions in and around the Middle East.

Despite the warm relations between the two countries in recent decades, Modi’s trip comes just a week after India joined more than 100 countries in condemning Israel’s de facto expansion in the occupied West Bank. New Delhi signed the statement on February 18 – a day later than most – after initially appearing hesitant.

This week, Netanyahu claimed that he plans to form a new regional bloc of countries, which he termed a “hexagon” alliance, to stand against “radical” Sunni and Shia-majority nations.

On Sunday, Netanyahu said this alliance would include Israel, India, Greece and Cyprus, along with other unnamed Arab, African and Asian states. None of these governments has officially endorsed this plan, including India.

Analysts said Modi’s visit will be viewed by many as an endorsement of Israeli policies, however.

“The timing of the visit is notable because it comes at a time when Netanyahu has lost immense credibility around the world, and to have the leader of the world’s so-called largest democracy visiting Israel and showing affection to Netanyahu, who has a warrant in his name from the International Criminal Court, is a ringing endorsement of him and Israel’s policies,” Essa said.

Modi’s visit also comes at a time of heightened tensions between Iran and the United States.

India and Iran have long had a cooperative relationship. After Modi visited Iran in 2016, the two countries signed a major deal, allowing India to develop the strategically located port of Chabahar on Iran’s southeastern coast. However, after the US imposed additional sanctions on Iran last year and threatened to penalise all countries that do business with Tehran, India has reportedly started moving out of Chabahar.

In June 2025, India did not join the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation’s (SCO’s) condemnation of Israel’s attacks on Iran during the 12-day war between Iran and Israel. However, it did join a later condemnation by the BRICS grouping of major emerging economies of the Israeli and US attacks on Iran.

The US, which has been applying its own pressure on India over the past year in retaliation for its purchase of Russian oil, is building up a vast array of military assets in the Arabian Sea, close to Iran, as President Donald Trump increases pressure on Iran to agree to a deal over its nuclear programme and stock of ballistic missiles.

Trump said last Friday that he was considering a limited strike on Iran if Tehran does not reach a deal with the US. “I guess I can say I am considering that,” he told reporters.

Iran has said it is seeking a diplomatic solution, but will defend itself if Washington resorts to military action.

Trump contradicts Witkoff over Iran nuclear bomb claims

NewsFeed

In his State of the Union address, US President Trump reiterated claims the US “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear programme last year, contradicting his special envoy Steve Witkoff, who said Iran is “one week away” from a nuclear bomb.