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Modi Addresses Knesset 2026: India-Israel Special Strategic Partnership, 16 MoUs & Iron Dome

PM Modi became the first Indian PM to address the Knesset on February 25, 2026. Learn about 16 MoUs, Iron Dome talks, IINCA, IMEC, and the India-Israel Special Strategic Partnership for UPSC, SSC, and Banking exams.

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πŸ“Š 3,015 words
πŸ“… March 2026
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“India stands with Israel firmly, with full conviction, in this moment and beyond.” β€” PM Narendra Modi, addressing the Knesset, February 25, 2026

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made history on February 25, 2026 when he became the first Indian Prime Minister ever to address the Knesset β€” Israel’s parliament β€” during a two-day state visit (February 25–26). The visit, at the invitation of PM Benjamin Netanyahu, resulted in the elevation of India-Israel ties to a “Special Strategic Partnership”, the signing of 16 MoUs and agreements, and a landmark agreement to share technical details of Israel’s Iron Dome missile defence system with India β€” marking a historic shift from a buyer-seller relationship to genuine co-production potential.

16 MoUs & Agreements Signed
$20.5B India Arms Purchases (2020–24)
$3.9B Bilateral Trade (2024)
1992 Full Diplomatic Ties Established
πŸ“Š Quick Reference
Visit Dates February 25–26, 2026
Historic First First Indian PM to address Knesset
Award Received Speaker of the Knesset Medal
Relationship Level Special Strategic Partnership
Key Defence Outcome Iron Dome technology sharing discussed
Israeli President Isaac Herzog | PM: Benjamin Netanyahu

πŸ›οΈ The Knesset Address: A Historic First

On February 25, Modi addressed a special plenary session of the Knesset β€” Israel’s unicameral parliament in Jerusalem. This was the first time any Indian Prime Minister had ever addressed the Israeli parliament, making it one of the most symbolically significant moments in the 75+ year history of India-Israel engagement.

Modi received a standing ovation from Knesset members. The opposition staged a brief walkout β€” not directed at Modi, but as part of a domestic protest against Netanyahu’s government over a judicial row. Opposition leader Yair Lapid personally assured Modi: “Our boycott is not about you.” In recognition of his address, Modi was conferred the prestigious Speaker of the Knesset Medal.

Modi opened by describing himself as “a representative of one ancient civilisation addressing another,” invoking the shared civilisational depth of India and Israel. He condemned the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led attack as “barbaric”, saying: “We feel your pain. We share your grief. No cause can justify the murder of civilians.” He drew a direct parallel to India’s own experience, referencing the 2008 Mumbai attacks and stating India’s “zero tolerance for terrorism with no double standard.” He called Israel “a protective wall against barbarism” and pledged an “iron alliance” against extremist terrorism.

Netanyahu’s response was equally emphatic: “You are more than a friend. You are a brother.” He highlighted that Israel stood with India during Operation Sindoor β€” India’s military action against terror infrastructure β€” signalling the two-way nature of the strategic relationship.

βœ“ Quick Recall

Three “firsts” from this visit: (1) First Indian PM to address the Knesset; (2) First Indian PM to receive the Speaker of the Knesset Medal; (3) Relationship upgraded to “Special Strategic Partnership” for the first time. Modi’s 2017 visit was the first-ever visit by an Indian PM to Israel β€” this 2026 visit deepened that milestone.

πŸ“œ Day 2: Yad Vashem, Presidential Meeting & Summit

On February 26, Modi and Netanyahu visited Yad Vashem β€” the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem β€” beginning in the Hall of Names. Modi laid a wreath at the memorial ceremony and placed a stone, following the Jewish tradition of remembrance. He posted: “The Holocaust stands as one of humanity’s darkest chapters.”

Modi then met Israeli President Isaac Herzog at the Presidential Residence, where Herzog planted an oak tree β€” a symbol of friendship and shared future β€” with Modi at the residence grounds.

The diplomatic centrepiece of Day 2 was the signing of 16 agreements across defence, agriculture, education, labour, geosciences, maritime heritage, and culture β€” overseen by both Prime Ministers at a joint press conference in Jerusalem.

✨ The 16 Agreements: Sector-by-Sector Breakdown

Defence and Security β€” The Headline Deal. The most strategically significant outcome was the agreement to share technical details of Israel’s Iron Dome missile defence system with India β€” elevating the relationship from buyer-seller to genuine technological partnership and potential co-production under Make in India. India has been developing its own Multi-Layered Air Defence systems, and Iron Dome technology would be a major addition to this architecture.

Labour. An agreement allowing 50,000 Indian workers in Israel over the next five years, addressing Israel’s acute labour shortage in construction and agriculture sectors β€” exacerbated by the displacement of Palestinian workers since October 2023.

Agriculture. MoU between the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) and MASHAV (Israel’s Agency for International Development Cooperation) to establish the India-Israel Innovation Centre for Agriculture (IINCA) β€” focusing on drip irrigation, precision agriculture, and drought-resistant crops.

Education. MoU between Nalanda University (Bihar) and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem for academic cooperation. A separate MoU on advancing education through Artificial Intelligence.

Geosciences. MoU between India’s Ministry of Mines and Israel’s Ministry of Energy on cooperation in geophysical exploration β€” relevant to India’s critical minerals strategy.

Maritime Heritage. MoU between India’s Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways and Israel’s Antiquities Authority β€” Underwater Archaeology Unit β€” for the development of the National Maritime Heritage Complex (NMHC) at Lothal, Gujarat.

Parliamentary Ties. Establishment of the India-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Group in the Parliament of India, following an MoU between the speakers of the Lok Sabha and the Knesset.

Sector Key Agreement Significance
Defence Iron Dome technical details sharing Shifts from buyer to co-production potential; strengthens India’s air defence
Labour 50,000 Indian workers over 5 years Addresses Israel labour shortage; remittances & skills for India
Agriculture IINCA (ICAR + MASHAV) Drip irrigation, precision farming β€” critical for water-scarce India
Education Nalanda Univ ↔ Hebrew Univ of Jerusalem Soft power; revival of Nalanda as global academic institution
Geosciences Mines & Energy ministries MoU Supports India’s critical minerals strategy
Maritime Heritage NMHC Lothal development Promotes India’s Harappan heritage; underwater archaeology
Parliament India-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Group Institutionalises people-to-people legislative ties
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse ICAR and MASHAV: ICAR = Indian Council of Agricultural Research (India’s apex agricultural research body). MASHAV = Israel’s Agency for International Development Cooperation (not an agricultural body β€” it is Israel’s development cooperation agency that runs agricultural programmes). IINCA is the new joint body they created together. Also: Nalanda University is in Bihar, not UP or Rajasthan β€” a commonly confused fact.

🌍 IMEC: The Bigger Connectivity Picture

A critical strategic thread running through the visit was Netanyahu’s reiteration of Israel’s commitment to the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) β€” the US-backed logistics corridor announced at the G20 New Delhi Summit in 2023. IMEC envisions a shipping route from India β†’ UAE β†’ Saudi Arabia β†’ Jordan β†’ Israel β†’ Mediterranean β†’ Europe. Israel is a critical node β€” the transit point between the Middle East land leg and the Mediterranean Sea leg.

IMEC directly competes with China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) as an alternative connectivity architecture for Asia-Europe trade. Netanyahu’s reaffirmation of IMEC amid the Gaza conflict disruptions signals Israel’s commitment to this broader strategic vision β€” and India’s expanding role in West Asian security architecture.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of IMEC as an alternative “shipping highway” from India to Europe β€” bypassing the traditional Suez Canal route and Chinese-controlled infrastructure. Israel is the last “pit stop” before goods cross the Mediterranean to Europe. That’s why Israel’s participation is non-negotiable for IMEC to work β€” and why Modi’s visit reinforces the corridor’s strategic logic.

βš–οΈ India-Israel Relations: The Full Context

India and Israel’s relationship has a complex history. India voted against Israel’s UN membership in 1949 and was among countries opposed to Israel’s creation in 1948. Full diplomatic relations were not established until 1992 β€” a product of India’s post-Cold War foreign policy liberalisation.

Since Modi came to power in 2014, the relationship has transformed dramatically. Modi’s 2017 visit was the first by an Indian PM to Israel. India has become Israel’s second-largest trading partner in Asia (after China) and its largest arms buyer globally β€” with $20.5 billion in arms purchases between 2020 and 2024 alone, covering drones, surveillance systems, missiles, and cybersecurity.

India’s position on the Gaza conflict has been a source of international criticism. India has abstained on several UN resolutions critical of Israel and has been reluctant to directly condemn Israeli military operations. Modi’s Knesset speech β€” unambiguous in its support for Israel β€” drew criticism from opposition parties at home and from countries with large Muslim populations.

πŸ“Œ Why This Visit Matters: The Strategic Calculus

The Modi-Knesset visit marks a qualitative shift in the India-Israel relationship on three dimensions. First, defence co-production: moving from being Israel’s largest buyer to a potential Iron Dome co-manufacturer signals India’s arrival as a genuine defence technology partner, not just a customer. Second, multilateral architecture: India’s deepening ties with Israel reinforce the India-Israel-US triangular alignment on counterterrorism, Iran policy, and China’s rise β€” all three governments currently share significant convergence on these issues. Third, connectivity: IMEC cannot work without Israel, and Modi’s visit reaffirms India’s commitment to this alternative to BRI.

Netanyahu’s explicit reference to Israel standing with India during Operation Sindoor is also significant β€” it confirms that the relationship has moved into genuine security solidarity territory, beyond transactional arms deals.

πŸ’­ Think About This

India’s “strategic autonomy” doctrine β€” non-alignment, multi-alignment, balanced partnerships β€” is being tested by its increasingly visible tilt toward Israel during the Gaza conflict. Can India simultaneously maintain its historic solidarity with Palestine (recognised Palestinian state since 1988), its new strategic depth with Israel, and its ties with Arab nations and Iran? How sustainable is this balancing act as the West Asian conflict continues?

1948–49
India opposes Israel’s creation and votes against its UN membership; recognises Israel in 1950 but without full diplomatic ties
1992
Full diplomatic relations established between India and Israel β€” part of India’s post-Cold War foreign policy realignment
2017
Modi becomes first Indian PM to visit Israel; relationship upgraded to “Strategic Partnership”
October 7, 2023
Hamas-led attack on Israel kills ~1,200 Israelis; Modi condemns it; India abstains on key UN resolutions
September 2023
IMEC announced at G20 New Delhi Summit β€” India-UAE-Saudi Arabia-Jordan-Israel-Europe corridor
February 25–26, 2026
Modi addresses Knesset (first Indian PM); 16 MoUs signed; relationship elevated to “Special Strategic Partnership”; Iron Dome talks; Yad Vashem visit
🧠 Memory Tricks
The “16-2017-1992” Number Chain:
16 MoUs signed in 2026 β†’ First visit was 2017 β†’ Diplomatic ties since 1992. Descending chain: 16 β†’ 2017 β†’ 1992. Anchor each number to its fact and you can recall all three in sequence.
IINCA Stands for “India-Israel Innovation Centre for Agriculture”:
Remember: “IINCA = ICAR (India) + MASHAV (Israel) = Agriculture Innovation.” The double “I” stands for India-Israel. Focus on drip irrigation and precision farming as its core activities.
Iron Dome Memory Hook:
“From buying Iron Dome to building it” β€” India went from $20.5 billion buyer to co-production partner. Think of it as moving from “customer” to “colleague” in defence technology.
IMEC Route = “I-UAE-S-J-I-E”:
India β†’ UAE β†’ Saudi Arabia β†’ Jordan β†’ Israel β†’ Europe. Mnemonic: “I Usually See Jokes In Exams” β€” each first letter maps to a IMEC node country/region.
πŸ“š Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip β€’ Master key facts

Question
What historic first did Modi achieve at the Knesset on February 25, 2026?
Click to flip
Answer
Modi became the first Indian Prime Minister ever to address the Knesset (Israeli parliament). He received a standing ovation and was conferred the Speaker of the Knesset Medal.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

βš–οΈ
How does India’s deepening partnership with Israel challenge or redefine its traditional “strategic autonomy” doctrine? Can India remain a credible voice for Palestine while signing defence and intelligence pacts with Israel?
Consider: India’s 1988 recognition of Palestine; abstentions at UN on Gaza resolutions; Arab world reaction; India’s need for Israeli defence technology and IMEC cooperation; whether “non-alignment” is being replaced by “selective alignment.”
🌍
What does India becoming Israel’s largest arms buyer reveal about the changing nature of India’s defence procurement strategy? How does Iron Dome co-production fit into India’s Make in India ambitions?
Think about: India’s shift from Soviet-era equipment to multi-source procurement; the $20.5B arms relationship; Rafale (France), S-400 (Russia), Predator drones (US) alongside Israeli systems; co-production vs. direct import; Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions β€’ Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
What historic achievement did PM Modi accomplish on February 25, 2026 in Israel?
A) First Indian PM to address the Knesset
B) First Indian PM to visit Yad Vashem
C) First Indian PM to visit Israel
D) First Indian PM to receive the Nobel Peace Prize
Explanation

Modi addressed the Knesset on February 25, 2026, becoming the first Indian Prime Minister ever to address the Israeli parliament. He received a standing ovation and was conferred the Speaker of the Knesset Medal. (Note: He was also the first to visit Israel β€” but that was in 2017, not 2026.)

Question 2 of 5
In which year were full diplomatic relations established between India and Israel?
A) 1948
B) 1971
C) 1992
D) 2003
Explanation

Full diplomatic relations between India and Israel were established in 1992 β€” part of India’s post-Cold War foreign policy realignment. India had recognised Israel in 1950 but maintained distance for decades due to its ties with Arab nations and the Palestinian cause.

Question 3 of 5
Which two bodies came together to form IINCA (India-Israel Innovation Centre for Agriculture)?
A) DRDO (India) and Mossad (Israel)
B) ICAR (India) and MASHAV (Israel)
C) NITI Aayog (India) and Hebrew University (Israel)
D) Ministry of Agriculture (India) and FAO (UN)
Explanation

IINCA was formed by ICAR (Indian Council of Agricultural Research) and MASHAV (Israel’s Agency for International Development Cooperation). It focuses on drip irrigation, precision agriculture, and drought-resistant crops.

Question 4 of 5
In the IMEC route, which country immediately precedes Israel in the corridor connecting India to Europe?
A) Egypt
B) Saudi Arabia
C) Lebanon
D) Jordan
Explanation

IMEC route: India β†’ UAE β†’ Saudi Arabia β†’ Jordan β†’ Israel β†’ Mediterranean β†’ Europe. Jordan immediately precedes Israel in the corridor. Israel is then the transit node to the Mediterranean sea segment heading to Europe.

Question 5 of 5
What is India’s position in terms of arms purchases from Israel between 2020–2024?
A) Third largest buyer globally
B) Second largest buyer globally
C) Largest arms buyer from Israel globally
D) Largest buyer in Asia only
Explanation

India is Israel’s largest arms buyer globally, with $20.5 billion in arms purchases between 2020 and 2024 β€” covering drones, surveillance systems, missiles, and cybersecurity systems.

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πŸ“Œ Key Takeaways for Exams
1
Historic Firsts: Modi became the first Indian PM to address the Knesset (Feb 25, 2026). He received the Speaker of the Knesset Medal. The relationship was elevated to “Special Strategic Partnership” β€” a first-ever designation.
2
16 MoUs: Agreements spanning defence (Iron Dome), labour (50,000 workers over 5 years), agriculture (IINCA = ICAR + MASHAV), education (Nalanda Univ ↔ Hebrew Univ), geosciences, maritime heritage (NMHC Lothal), and parliamentary friendship group.
3
Iron Dome: India and Israel agreed to share technical details of the Iron Dome missile defence system β€” moving from buyer-seller to co-production potential under Make in India. India is already Israel’s largest arms buyer ($20.5B in 2020–24).
4
Diplomatic Timeline: India-Israel full diplomatic ties: 1992. First Indian PM to visit Israel: Modi (2017). First Indian PM to address Knesset: Modi (2026). Israeli leaders: PM Netanyahu, President Isaac Herzog.
5
IMEC: Announced at G20 New Delhi (2023). Route: India β†’ UAE β†’ Saudi Arabia β†’ Jordan β†’ Israel β†’ Europe. Competes with China’s BRI. Israel’s participation is non-negotiable for the corridor to function.
6
Operation Sindoor Reference: Israel’s spokespersons explicitly referenced Operation Sindoor (India’s military action against terror infrastructure) as a moment of bilateral solidarity β€” confirming the relationship has moved into genuine security partnership territory.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Knesset and why is Modi’s address there historically significant?
The Knesset is Israel’s unicameral parliament, located in Jerusalem. It has 120 members and represents the legislative authority of the State of Israel. Modi’s address on February 25, 2026 was the first ever by an Indian Prime Minister β€” a significant symbolic milestone given that India did not establish full diplomatic relations with Israel until 1992 and historically maintained distance due to its ties with Arab nations and the Palestinian cause. Addressing a foreign parliament is a rare diplomatic honour, typically reserved for close allies.
What is the Iron Dome and why does sharing its technology with India matter?
Iron Dome is Israel’s short-range air defence system, designed to intercept and destroy incoming rockets, artillery shells, and mortars. It achieved global prominence during the Gaza conflict for its high interception rate. India’s agreement to receive Iron Dome technical details marks a shift from being a buyer to a potential co-producer under Make in India β€” a significant upgrade in the defence relationship. India is building its own multi-layered air defence architecture, and Iron Dome technology would complement existing systems like the S-400 (Russia) and Akash (indigenous).
What is Yad Vashem and why did Modi visit it?
Yad Vashem is Israel’s official memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, located in Jerusalem. It serves as both a museum documenting the systematic persecution and murder of six million Jews by Nazi Germany and a site of national mourning. Visiting Yad Vashem is a standard protocol for heads of state visiting Israel β€” it signals respect for Israel’s national history and the Jewish experience of persecution. Modi laid a wreath and placed a stone (a Jewish tradition of remembrance) at the memorial on February 26, 2026.
What is the National Maritime Heritage Complex (NMHC) at Lothal, and how does it connect to the India-Israel MoU?
Lothal in Gujarat is one of the most prominent cities of the ancient Indus Valley Civilisation β€” believed to have had one of the world’s earliest dockyard facilities. India is developing the National Maritime Heritage Complex (NMHC) at Lothal to showcase India’s 4,500-year maritime history. The MoU with Israel’s Antiquities Authority (Underwater Archaeology Unit) brings Israeli expertise in underwater archaeological exploration to support this project β€” making it both a cultural heritage and diplomatic statement about India’s ancient maritime legacy.
Why did India not have full diplomatic relations with Israel until 1992, despite recognising it in 1950?
India’s foreign policy toward Israel was shaped by several factors: the need to maintain Arab support in the Cold War-era Non-Aligned Movement; India’s large Muslim population and its political sensitivity; India’s dependence on West Asian oil exports; and Nehru-era solidarity with the Palestinian cause. India recognised Israel in 1950 but kept relations low-key. The 1992 normalisation came with India’s post-Cold War foreign policy liberalisation β€” the same period India established ties with many other countries and began its economic reforms. The shift reflected a more pragmatic, interest-based foreign policy calculus replacing ideology-driven positions.
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