India ‘stands firmly’ with Israel, Modi says in address to Knesset


India 'Stands Firmly' with Israel — Modi's Knesset Address

UPSC Study Note | GS-II: International Relations


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1950 India establishes consular relations with Israel (did not accord full diplomatic recognition)
1992 Full diplomatic relations established; turning point under PM Narasimha Rao
2017 Modi becomes first Indian PM to visit Israel (July); partnership upgraded to "Strategic Partnership"
Oct 7, 2023 Hamas attacks Israel; India initially condemned terrorism but also called for protection of civilians
2024–25 India–Israel defence and water-tech cooperation deepens amid Gaza war
Feb 2026 Modi addresses Knesset — first Indian PM to do so; Bilateral Investment Treaty concluded [S2][S3]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. First Indian PM to address the Knesset: Narendra Modi (25 February 2026). [S1]
  2. First Indian PM to visit Israel: Narendra Modi (2017). [S2]
  3. Knesset: Israeli unicameral parliament with 120 seats, located in Jerusalem.
  4. Full India–Israel diplomatic relations established in 1992 (under PM Narasimha Rao).
  5. Speaker of the Knesset Medal: highest honour of Israeli Parliament — conferred on Modi during February 2026 visit. [S3]
  6. Gaza Peace Initiative was endorsed by the UN Security Council (not just UNGA). [S1]
  7. Hamas attack date: 7 October 2023 — the triggering event for the ongoing Gaza conflict.
  8. India–Israel Strategic Partnership upgraded in 2017.
  9. Bilateral Investment Treaty between India and Israel was concluded in February 2026. [S2]
  10. Modi called for early finalisation of India–Israel Free Trade Agreement during the 2026 visit. [S2]
  11. India recognised the State of Palestine in 1988.
  12. Israel is India's third-largest defence supplier (after Russia and France, approximately).
  13. India's West Asia policy is characterised by "de-hyphenation" — engaging Israel independently of Palestine ties.
  14. Modi described the Hamas attack as a "barbaric terrorist attack" — India's official characterisation. [S1]
  15. India's stated position: zero tolerance for terrorism with no double standards. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (International Relations — India's foreign policy, bilateral relations, India and its neighbourhood/world)

Syllabus Headings: - Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests - Bilateral, regional and global groupings involving India - Important International Institutions, agencies and fora

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's West Asia policy reflects a fundamental tension between its civilisational ties with the Arab world and its strategic partnership with Israel." Critically examine in the context of PM Modi's 2026 Knesset address. (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. Discuss the evolution of India–Israel relations since 1992. How does India balance its engagement with Israel with its traditional support for Palestinian statehood? (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. India's "de-hyphenation" policy in West Asia — assess its strategic rationale and the challenges posed by the Gaza conflict. (GS-II, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India–Palestine Relations The other side of India's West Asia balancing act; UNGA voting record
India–UAE / Saudi Arabia / Qatar Relations Gulf Arab partners whose reactions to India–Israel ties matter for energy and diaspora
India's Iran Policy & Chabahar Port Iran–Israel tensions directly implicate India's Chabahar investment and oil imports
India's Counter-Terrorism Policy "Zero tolerance, no double standards" doctrine; FATF membership; SCO counter-terror cooperation
Hamas, Hezbollah, IRGC — Designation as Terror Organisations Factual background essential to understand India's legal framing
India's Voting Record at UNGA / UNSC Pattern of abstentions/votes on Gaza resolutions reveals the balancing logic
India–Israel Defence Cooperation Drones (Heron), Barak missiles, SPIKE ATGMs — India is Israel's largest defence export market
UN Security Council Reform India's UNSC permanent membership bid; India's position on UNSC-mandated peace processes

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong year for first India–Israel diplomatic relations: Full relations = 1992, not 1948 or 1950. India established consular ties in 1950 but full diplomatic recognition came only in 1992.
  2. Confusing "first visit" with "first Knesset address": Modi's first visit to Israel was 2017; the Knesset address was 2026 — two separate historic firsts.
  3. Gaza Peace Initiative ≠ Indian initiative: It was UNSC-endorsed; India expressed support for it — India did not author or propose it.
  4. Assuming India supports Israel unconditionally: India simultaneously supports the two-state solution and Palestinian statehood — the twin-track position is the examinable nuance.
  5. Misattributing Israel's rank as defence supplier: Israel is among India's top-three defence suppliers but exact ranking fluctuates; do not state it as definitively "second" — the examinable fact is that Israel is a major supplier, not the precise rank.

11. Sources