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New Delhi: US gives India a six-month waiver of sanctions to operate Iran's Chabahar Port

India announced on Thursday that the U.S. had granted it a six-month waiver of sanctions to operate Chabahar's Iranian port. This will help New Delhi to boost its trade with Afghanistan and Central Asian nations, bypassing Pakistan.

Last year, India signed a contract for 10 years with Iran.

Develop and operate a port

This month, the United States has increased its cooperation with Taliban-run Afghanistan.

Reopening of its Embassy

Kabul was closed in 2021 after the Islamist group took power following the withdrawal by the U.S. led NATO forces.

Initially, the port was planned to be built on Iran's Gulf of Oman coast in the southeast. It would have a rail connection to Afghanistan. The goal was to build the economy of the landlocked nation through trade while reducing Kabul’s dependency on the Pakistani Port of Karachi.

The waiver came after U.S. president Donald Trump said this week that he hoped to reach an agreement with the European Union.

Trade deal with India

- a sign of a warming in relations, which had deteriorated to their worst point in decades when he doubled the tariffs on Indian imported goods to 50% in punishment for Indian purchases Russian oil.

Indian refiners now cut

Russian oil imports

Following Washington's sanctions imposed last week on Moscow's two largest crude oil exporters, Rosneft & Lukoil.

Randhir Jaiswal, spokesperson for the Indian Foreign Ministry, said at a weekly press briefing that the port had been granted an exemption.

He said that India and the Trump administration were continuing to discuss a bilateral deal.

Washington had last week revoked sanctions waivers for Chabahar that were initially granted in 2018 as part of an effort to "maximize pressure" on Iran in order to counter what they called destabilising activities by the Islamic Republic in support of their nuclear and missile programmes.

Unnamed Indian officials confirmed that the waiver of U.S. sanctions had come into effect on Wednesday. The U.S. Embassy in New Delhi didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment. Reporting by Shivam Patel, editing by Sudipto Ganuly and Mark Heinrich

(source: Reuters)