US-Iran Peace Deal Offers Relief, and Lessons for India

The deal could lower energy costs, ease inflationary pressures and support the rupee; but for India, it offers insight on negotiating with any major power from a position of confidence.

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By Ajay Srivastava

Ajay Srivastava, founder of Global Trade Research Initiative, is an ex-Indian Trade Service officer with expertise in WTO and FTA negotiations.

June 15, 2026 at 8:19 AM IST

The United States and Iran have reached a peace deal to end a four-month war that disrupted global energy supplies, pushed oil prices above $100 per barrel, and brought West Asia to the brink of a wider regional conflict.

President Donald Trump announced the agreement on June 15, declaring it "complete" on Truth Social.

For India, which relies heavily on West Asia for crude oil, LPG and LNG supplies, the deal promises relief from high energy prices, pressure on the rupee, and inflationary risks that intensified during the conflict.

The agreement provides for the immediate lifting of the US naval blockade against Iran, and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most important energy shipping routes.

The formal signing ceremony is scheduled for June 19 in Geneva, Switzerland.

According to Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who mediated the negotiations alongside Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Türkiye, the agreement mandates an immediate and permanent cessation of military operations across all fronts, including Lebanon.

Iranian officials have confirmed that a 14-point memorandum of understanding has been finalised. Reported provisions include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, technical talks on clearing mines from regional waterways, a 60-day framework for negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme, and the phased release of up to $24 billion in frozen Iranian assets, including an initial $12 billion before formal negotiations begin.

The agreement marks the end of a conflict that began on February 28 when the United States and Israel launched coordinated military operations against Iran over concerns regarding its nuclear programme.

What started as a limited campaign rapidly evolved into a regional confrontation involving several Gulf countries. Iran retaliated with missile and drone attacks on US military facilities across the Gulf, while its allies opened additional fronts in Lebanon and elsewhere.

The conflict's most significant global impact came through disruption of energy supplies.

Iran effectively choked shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of global oil trade and substantial volumes of LNG and LPG pass. The disruption pushed oil prices above $100 per barrel, tightened energy supplies, and increased inflationary pressures worldwide.

Washington has portrayed the agreement as a diplomatic breakthrough that will restore regional stability and secure energy flows.

Iran, however, presented the outcome as a strategic victory. Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi confirmed the agreement, while Iranian military leaders claimed that Tehran had forced the United States and Israel to negotiate by demonstrating its ability to sustain resistance and impose significant costs on its adversaries.

Israel reacted differently, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz criticising the new peace framework, arguing that it leaves Iran's missile programme, regional proxy networks and nuclear capabilities largely untouched. Israeli officials have also opposed the release of frozen Iranian assets and other economic concessions granted to Tehran. The disagreement highlights the fragility of the accord and raises questions about its long-term durability. For the agreement to succeed, Washington may need to restrain Israeli actions that could undermine the peace process.

For India, the agreement brings immediate economic relief. The conflict exposed India's dependence on West Asia, from where it sources roughly 50% of its crude oil imports, around 70% of its LPG supplies and nearly 90% of its LNG imports.

The disruption of shipping through the Gulf raised India's energy import bill, increased inflation risks, weakened the rupee and forced refiners to seek alternative supplies from distant markets.

Reopening the Strait of Hormuz is expected to stabilise energy markets, ease pressure on oil and gas prices, strengthen the rupee and improve India's growth outlook.

The broader lesson for India, though, is strategic. The United States did not embrace peace out of goodwill; it did so because the costs of war became too high. Iran's ability to disrupt energy supplies, raise global oil prices, and impose economic and military costs forced Washington to negotiate.

India should draw a clear lesson from this outcome: engage with the United States as an equal partner, not a subordinate one. Whether in trade, technology, energy, or foreign policy, India must reject arrangements that undermine its interests. Strategic autonomy, economic strength, and negotiating from a position of confidence remain India's best safeguards in dealing with any major power.