TEHRAN: According to sources, after consistently maintaining a pro-Israel policy, India is now suddenly attempting to rebuild its ties with Iran.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi reportedly contacted Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian via telephone to request cooperation in the energy sector and other domains.
This move comes from the same Prime Minister who visited Israel prior to the Israeli strikes on Iran, even declaring Israel as a “fatherland” for Indians.
Throughout the conflict, India remained silent on Israeli aggression, while Indian media continuously mocked the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) claims of battlefield success.
Furthermore, Indian nationals were implicated in leaking sensitive intelligence regarding Iran’s military and political leadership, as well as key installations, to Mossad.
India also delivered a severe blow to Iran’s trust by withdrawing its investors from the Chabahar Port project and announcing its dissociation from the venture.
In stark contrast, Pakistan’s civil and military leadership stood firmly by their brotherly neighboring Islamic nation through every critical moment, maintaining continuous bilateral communication and solidarity.
Now, as the highly complex processes of a ceasefire, peace talks, and an Iran-US agreement have finally been achieved through the relentless, round-the-clock diplomatic efforts of Pakistan and Qatar, India has reverted to its traditional approach of duplicity and flattery to cozy up to Iran once again.
Ultimately, the choice lies with Iran to decide its broader strategic interests: whether to stand with nations that stood by it during the testing times of war and foreign aggression, or with those who used Iran and other countries as stepping stones to fulfill their ambitions of becoming a regional superpower, only to shamelessly align themselves with Iran’s worst enemies and the killers of its leadership when conflict erupted.





