Prime Minister Narendra Modi held phone conversations with rulers of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Jordan on March 3, 2026, condemning Iranian military attacks on Gulf states without naming Iran directly. Modi emphasized India's support for regional peace and stability while assuring protection for Indian communities across West Asia. External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar simultaneously engaged with counterparts across eight Middle Eastern nations.
India hosts approximately 9 million nationals across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, making West Asia critical to Delhi's foreign policy. Bahrain (150,000 Indians), Saudi Arabia (1.6 million), and UAE (3.4 million) are major employment hubs. These three nations host significant US military installations — Bahrain's US Naval Forces Central Command and Fifth Fleet, Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan air base, and UAE's Al Dhafra Air Force base. Regional tensions escalated markedly after Modi's February 25-26 visit to Israel, during which he met PM Benjamin Netanyahu. Within 40 hours of Modi's departure from Israel, the US and Israel initiated military operations against Iran, creating unprecedented instability in an economically vital region for Indian workers and trade.
On March 3, 2026, PM Modi conducted five separate phone conversations with regional leaders: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Bahrain King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, and Jordan King Abdullah II. Modi condemned attacks on Saudi Arabia and Bahrain as violations of sovereignty without explicitly naming Iran. With Netanyahu on March 2 night, Modi conveyed 'concerns over recent developments' and emphasized 'civilian safety as priority,' requesting 'early cessation of hostilities.' He told Saudi Crown Prince and Bahrain's king that 'earliest restoration of regional peace and stability is of utmost importance.' Simultaneously, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar engaged foreign ministers of Iran, Israel, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, and Kuwait — signaling India's diplomatic coordination across all parties.
For India's 9 million Gulf residents, regional escalation threatens employment security and remittance flows. Indian workers in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and UAE collectively remit approximately $35-40 billion annually to India — 3% of national GDP. Military escalation risks disrupting oil supply chains; Saudi Arabia and UAE supply 16% of India's crude oil imports (₹3.5 lakh crore annually). Modi's diplomatic calls signal India's balancing act: supporting US-aligned Gulf allies while maintaining Iran relations (Iran supplies 3-4% of India's oil). India's abstention from UN votes on Middle East conflicts reflects this hedging. However, if hostilities intensify, Indian workers face evacuation risks similar to the 1990-91 Gulf War, when 170,000 Indians were evacuated, causing economic disruption costing ₹12,000 crore.
Key developments to monitor: UN Security Council sessions on March 10-12 where India's voting position will be tested; emergency ministerial meetings of the GCC scheduled for March 6 where India's diplomatic stance will face pressure. Israeli-Iranian military exchanges could escalate if either side responds to the March 2-3 strikes — watch for statements from Israeli Defense Ministry (expected March 5-7). External Affairs Ministry will brief Parliament on March 8 regarding Indian community safety protocols. Oil prices are critical: Brent crude above $95/barrel would trigger India's economic advisory panel review on March 15. India must complete evacuation route coordination with Gulf states by March 20. Next diplomatic checkpoint: G20 foreign ministers' meeting on April 2 in Brazil, where India's Non-Aligned Movement stance will be scrutinized.