New Delhi: India will host the next Quad Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in New Delhi on May 26, 2026, marking the first high-level ministerial gathering for the four-nation grouping since July 2025. The Ministry of External Affairs confirmed that External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar will host Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, and United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the latter making his inaugural official visit to India in his current diplomatic capacity. The top diplomats are scheduled to hold independent bilateral talks with Jaishankar and collectively call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi during their stay in the national capital.
The timing of the meeting carries significant diplomatic weight, arriving at a critical juncture for the security and economic architecture of the Indo-Pacific region. The four nations—India, the United States, Japan, and Australia—will build directly on their previous framework discussions held in Washington, D.C., working to advance their shared vision of a free, open, and inclusive maritime corridor. Key focus areas on the New Delhi agenda include strengthening regional supply chain resilience, formalizing critical mineral partnerships, securing maritime infrastructure, and expanding cooperation in counter-terrorism and humanitarian disaster relief.
Beyond regional security frameworks, the ministerial dialogue is expected to serve as a vital course correction to restore high-level political momentum to the alliance. The meeting follows a period of institutional drift after India’s rotating 2025 Quad chairmanship concluded without the realization of a highly anticipated Leaders’ Summit. Ahead of his arrival from a NATO ministerial conference in Sweden, Secretary of State Rubio underscored Washington’s intent to deepen energy ties and maritime coordination with India, describing New Delhi as a vital strategic partner. Concurrently, the summit faces familiar geopolitical friction, as Beijing continues to monitor the alliance closely, frequently criticizing the Quad’s expanding defensive and technological mandates as a containment strategy aimed at countering Chinese influence.