India-Israel Investment Pact: Quietly Keeping IMEC Alive Amid Uncertainty

In a world where geopolitics often grabs headlines for conflict rather than cooperation, India and Israel have quietly signed a bilateral investment treaty that could carry implications far beyond just trade numbers. On September 8 in New Delhi, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and her Israeli counterpart Bezalel Smotrich sealed the deal, calling it a “significant strategic step.”

At its core, the treaty promises stronger protection for investors, easier capital transfers, and compensation safeguards in case of losses. But beyond the legal text, it signals something bigger: a subtle effort to keep the dream of the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) alive — even as politics has put the grand project on pause.

For businesses, this treaty means one simple thing: certainty. In today’s volatile climate, where global investors are increasingly wary of Israel due to the Gaza war, India’s move offers Tel Aviv a dependable partner. The two nations already share deep ties in defense, technology, and agriculture. Now, with this pact, infrastructure, fintech, and digital connectivity have been added to the mix.

To put things in perspective, bilateral investments currently stand at just $800 million — far less than the $4 billion annual trade between the two countries. With the new protections in place, both sides hope to see these numbers rise. For Indian MSMEs, start-ups, and tech innovators, this also opens a window to collaborate with Israeli counterparts in AI, cybersecurity, and innovation ecosystems.

But the story doesn’t end there. For India, this isn’t just about Israel — it’s about the bigger picture of regional connectivity. IMEC, announced in 2023, was billed as the U.S.-backed alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative, aiming to link India to Europe through the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Israel. The plan envisioned new rail, shipping, energy, and digital routes, but it lost steam after the Gaza war stalled Saudi-Israel normalization talks.

Yet India has been playing the long game. In the last two years, New Delhi signed a similar investment treaty with the UAE, expanded its strategic partnership with Saudi Arabia, and now tightened bonds with Israel. Taken together, these steps suggest India is quietly laying the bricks for IMEC’s foundation, even if the grand corridor itself is on hold.

For ordinary people, these developments may sound distant. But in practice, corridors like IMEC mean cheaper goods, faster logistics, more jobs, and stronger regional cooperation. And for small businesses, such treaties lower risks, making it easier to expand into new markets.

Whether IMEC re-emerges in its original form or in a modified avatar, one thing is clear: India sees economic integration as the future. The Israel-India treaty may look like just another diplomatic document, but in reality, it is part of a much larger puzzle — one where trade outpaces politics, and cooperation becomes a tool for resilience in uncertain times.

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