Treaty on Chagos deal paused for holding discussions with U.S. govt., says U.K. Minister
UPSC Study Note: Chagos Islands Deal — UK-Mauritius Treaty Paused
1. At a Glance
- The UK-Mauritius Chagos Archipelago Treaty (signed 22 May 2025) recognises Mauritius's sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago (British Indian Ocean Territory/BIOT), while granting the UK a 99-year lease over Diego Garcia island. [S2]
- Diego Garcia hosts a critical joint UK-US military base in the Indian Ocean — strategically vital for power projection into the Persian Gulf, South Asia, and the Indo-Pacific. [S1]
- As of February 2026, the UK Parliament has paused the enabling legislation due to pressure from the Trump administration, which reversed its earlier endorsement of the deal. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: Decolonisation, international maritime law, Indo-Pacific geopolitics, ICJ advisory opinions, India-Mauritius relations, UNCLOS.
2. Why in the News
- May 2025: UK and Mauritius formally sign the sovereignty transfer treaty after 11 rounds of negotiations. [S1]
- February 2026: UK Foreign Office Minister Hamish Falconer tells the House of Commons that the bill operationalising the treaty is on hold pending discussions with Washington. [S1]
- Trigger — Trump's reversal: US President Donald Trump — who had previously backed the deal — publicly called for it to be reconsidered, stating Diego Garcia should not be "given away" and may be needed in the event of a US strike on Iran. [S1]
- Falconer's statement: "Nothing in the UK-Mauritius deal has changed since the US administration approved it." [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1814: Britain gains control of Mauritius (including Chagos) from France under the Treaty of Paris. [S4]
- 1965: UK detaches the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius (then a colony) to form the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT) — a condition imposed before granting Mauritius independence. [S3][S4]
- 1968: Mauritius granted independence, but without the Chagos islands — a move Mauritius consistently protested as illegal. [S2][S3]
- 1967–1973: Chagossians (Ilois people) forcibly evicted to Mauritius, Seychelles, and UK to enable construction of the Diego Garcia military base under a UK-US agreement. [S3][S4]
- 1971: Diego Garcia Naval Support Facility formally established as a joint UK-US base. [S4]
- 2019: International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivers advisory opinion (Feb 2019) declaring the UK's detachment of Chagos unlawful and calling for return of the islands to Mauritius "as rapidly as possible." [S2][S3]
- 2019: UN General Assembly Resolution 73/295 (116 votes in favour, 6 against including UK and US) endorses the ICJ advisory opinion. [S3]
- 2021: International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) ruled UK lacks jurisdiction over Chagos waters.
- October 2024: UK announces in-principle agreement on sovereignty transfer. [S2]
- 22 May 2025: Treaty formally signed; UK to pay Mauritius avg. GBP 101 million per year during the lease period. [S1]
- 26 February 2026: UK Parliament legislation paused pending US consultations. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Archipelago name | Chagos Archipelago (also: Oil Islands) |
| Current legal name | British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT) |
| Key island | Diego Garcia — largest; houses the joint UK-US military base |
| Location | Central Indian Ocean; ~1,600 km south of India |
| Area | ~54,400 km² (including EEZ waters) |
| Number of islands | ~55 islands across 7 atolls |
| Displaced people | Chagossians / Ilois (~1,500–2,000 people, 1967–73) |
| Treaty signed | 22 May 2025 |
| Treaty terms | Mauritius sovereignty + 99-year UK lease of Diego Garcia |
| Annual payment | avg. GBP 101 million/year (from UK to Mauritius) |
| Negotiation rounds | 11 rounds (under Conservative UK government) |
| ICJ opinion | February 2019 — detachment unlawful |
| UNGA resolution | 73/295 (adopted May 2019) — 116:6 in favour |
| US stance (2025–26) | Initially approved → Trump reversed, urged reconsideration |
| UK minister (2026) | Hamish Falconer, Foreign Office Minister |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Diego Garcia is among the most strategically important military installations globally — used in Gulf War (1991), Afghanistan (2001), Iraq War (2003) operations. [S4]
- The base gives the US power projection capability covering the entire Indian Ocean Rim, Arabian Sea, and Bay of Bengal — directly relevant to India's maritime security calculus.
- Trump's invocation of a potential Iran strike underscores Diego Garcia's role as a forward operating base for long-range strikes. [S1]
- India has a strategic interest: closer UK-Mauritius ties with Mauritius sovereignty could bring Chinese influence into the Chagos equation given China's growing presence in Indian Ocean. [S5]
Legal / Constitutional
- The ICJ's 2019 advisory opinion — though non-binding — carries significant legal and moral weight; it invoked UN Resolution 1514 (1960) (Declaration on Decolonisation) and the right to self-determination. [S3]
- BIOT's creation in 1965 arguably violated the UN Charter's decolonisation principles.
- The treaty of May 2025 would be the first formal transfer of sovereignty from the UK to a former colony via negotiated agreement in decades.
- Chagossians have separately litigated rights of return in UK courts; their legal status under the new treaty remains contested.
Environmental
- Chagos hosts the world's largest coral atoll system and one of the most pristine marine environments on the planet. [S2]
- The Chagos Marine Protected Area (MPA) — declared by UK in 2010 (one of the world's largest, ~640,000 km²) — was contested by Mauritius as a sovereignty manoeuvre.
- The new treaty may enable Mauritius to manage the MPA jointly, with implications for IUCN biodiversity commitments. [S2]
Historical
- The Chagos case is a textbook example of Cold War-era decolonisation manipulation — islands detached as a precondition for independence to serve superpower strategic interests.
- Parallels exist with the US base at Guantánamo Bay (Cuba) and Okinawa (Japan) in terms of military-base sovereignty tensions.
Economic
- The GBP 101 million/year payment represents a significant fiscal transfer to Mauritius — a Small Island Developing State (SIDS).
- Mauritius's economy (~USD 14 billion GDP) stands to benefit; funds could support its blue economy and climate resilience agenda.
Administrative / Governance
- The UK's decision to pause Parliamentary legislation reflects the tension between treaty obligations and executive-level pressure from an ally — a rare instance of legislative suspension on foreign-policy grounds.
- The deal was negotiated under the Conservative government but operationalised under Labour — creating domestic political complications. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 22 May 2025: UK-Mauritius treaty formally signed; recognised Mauritius sovereignty with 99-year lease and GBP 101 mn/year payment. [S1][S2]
- October 2024: UK (under Labour PM Keir Starmer) announced in-principle agreement. [S2]
- Late 2025 – early 2026: US President Trump reverses earlier US support for the deal; calls for reconsideration, citing strategic value of Diego Garcia. [S1]
- February 2026 (last week before article date): Trump publicly states Diego Garcia should not be "given away"; links it to potential US action against Iran. [S1]
- 26 February 2026: UK FM Hamish Falconer tells House of Commons legislation is paused for US consultations. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Chagos Archipelago was separated from Mauritius in 1965 to form the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT).
- Diego Garcia is the largest island in the Chagos Archipelago and hosts a joint UK-US military base.
- The ICJ advisory opinion of February 2019 declared the UK's detachment of Chagos from Mauritius as unlawful.
- UN General Assembly Resolution 73/295 (2019) endorsed the ICJ opinion with 116 votes in favour and only 6 against.
- The UK-Mauritius treaty was formally signed on 22 May 2025, after 11 rounds of negotiations.
- Under the treaty, the UK will pay Mauritius an average of GBP 101 million per year during the lease period.
- The lease for Diego Garcia under the treaty is for 99 years.
- The Chagossians (Ilois) were forcibly displaced between 1967 and 1973 to enable construction of the military base.
- The UK's Chagos Marine Protected Area, declared in 2010, covers approximately 640,000 km² — one of the world's largest.
- The UK Foreign Office Minister who announced the Parliamentary pause in February 2026 is Hamish Falconer.
- The ITLOS (International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea) ruled in 2021 that UK lacked jurisdiction over Chagos waters.
- Diego Garcia is located approximately 1,600 km south of India in the central Indian Ocean.
- The Chagos deal was negotiated under the Conservative UK government but signed under the Labour government.
- Trump cited the possibility of a US strike on Iran as a reason Diego Garcia must be retained under US-UK control.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper II — International Relations - Syllabus: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests; bilateral, regional and global groupings.
GS Paper I — History / Social Justice - Syllabus: Post-independence consolidation; decolonisation movements.
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The UK-Mauritius Chagos treaty represents a turning point in the international law of decolonisation." Critically examine with reference to the ICJ's 2019 advisory opinion and the strategic interests of major powers. 2. The Chagos Archipelago dispute illustrates the enduring tension between self-determination and military-strategic imperatives. Discuss with examples from Cold War history and contemporary geopolitics. 3. Examine India's strategic interests in the resolution of the Chagos sovereignty dispute. How does the outcome affect the balance of power in the Indian Ocean Region?
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Indian Ocean Region (IOR) — Geopolitics: Diego Garcia is central to any IOR security analysis; connects to QUAD, IONS, IORA.
- UNCLOS (UN Convention on the Law of the Sea): ITLOS rulings on Chagos are UNCLOS-based; EEZ, continental shelf rights.
- ICJ Advisory Opinions vs. Binding Judgements: Understand the legal weight of advisory opinions vs. contentious cases.
- Decolonisation — UN Charter Chapter XI: Right to self-determination; UNGA Resolution 1514 (1960).
- India-Mauritius Relations: Mauritius is a key partner in India's SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) doctrine; also critical for the India-Mauritius DTAA.
- Diego Garcia and Iran: Context of Trump's Iran policy and US basing strategy in the Middle East-Indian Ocean corridor.
- China in the Indian Ocean: String of Pearls strategy; Hambantota, Gwadar — why Chagos sovereignty matters to India.
- Small Island Developing States (SIDS): Mauritius as a SIDS; climate vulnerability, blue economy, sovereignty rights.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing ICJ advisory opinion with binding judgement: The 2019 ICJ ruling was an advisory opinion (requested by UNGA) — not a binding judgement; the UK was not legally compelled, though politically pressured.
- Wrong year for treaty signing: The treaty was signed May 2025, NOT 2024 (the 2024 announcement was an in-principle agreement).
- Conflating BIOT with all UK overseas territories: BIOT is a distinct Overseas Territory — do not confuse with Bermuda, Gibraltar, Falklands, etc.
- Assuming Chagossians are Mauritian citizens: Chagossians have a distinct identity and legal claims; their right of return is a separate legal question from sovereignty.
- Misidentifying the MPA: The Chagos Marine Protected Area was declared by the UK in 2010, not by Mauritius — and was legally contested by Mauritius as a sovereignty move, not an environmental measure.
- US role confusion: The US is not a direct signatory to the UK-Mauritius treaty — it has a separate bilateral agreement with the UK for use of Diego Garcia; the treaty does not directly change US base rights.
11. Sources
- [S1] Treaty on Chagos deal paused for holding discussions with U.S. govt., says U.K. Minister — The Hindu (article supplied as primary source, 26 February 2026) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] Historic Agreement on Chagos | United Nations in Mauritius — https://mauritius.un.org/en/295406-historic-agreement-chagos — (Tier 2)
- [S3] United Nations General Assembly A/73/773 — ICJ Advisory Opinion, 5 March 2019 — https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/n19/058/01/pdf/n1905801.pdf — (Tier 2)
- [S4] Chagos Archipelago | Geography, History, Map, & Facts | Britannica — https://www.britannica.com/place/Chagos-Archipelago — (Tier 3)
- [S5] Mauritius seeks new Chagos deal with UK in shared interests of India — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/economy/news/mauritius-seeks-amendment-in-double-taxation-avoidance-pact-with-india-125031100040_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S6] UK to Cede Chagos Islands to Mauritius — DTE — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/africa/chagos-archipelago-sovereignty-dispute-being-resolved-is-a-step-forward-towards-establishment-of-a-mauritian-marine-protected-area-says-vineetha-revi — (Tier 4)
Note: All facts drawn from Tier 2 (UN.org) and Tier 3 (Britannica) sources and the Tier 4 newspaper article as fallback primary source. No Tier 1 Indian government source indexed this topic directly.