Delta will begin flying to Mumbai next year, marking its return to India after a four-year hiatus.

The move, Delta CEO Ed Bastian said, is being enabled by recent agreements the U.S. entered into with the governments of the United Arab Emirates and Qatar related to the practices of Gulf airlines Emirates, Etihad and Qatar Airways.

"We are thankful to the president for taking real action to enforce our open skies trade deals, which made this new service possible," Bastian said.

Delta last flew to India in 2015 in a one-stop route that went from New York Kennedy to Amsterdam and on to Mumbai, but cut the service blaming increasing competition from connecting services offered by the Gulf carriers.

Delta, along with United and American, accused the Gulf carriers of violating aviation agreements by accepting more than $50 billion in state subsidies since 2004.

Delta didn't say whether its renewed Mumbai service would launch from Kennedy or from its Atlanta hub, nor did the carrier reveal whether the route would again include a stopover. Delta also has not announced a start date.

When it does resume flying to Mumbai, Delta will join United as the only U.S. carriers to serve the Asian subcontinent. United flies from its Newark hub to Mumbai and Delhi. Air India also flies a handful of India-U.S. routes.

Agreements reached between the U.S and the UAE this month and the U.S. and Qatar in January require Etihad and Qatar Airways to begin producing annual financial reports, audited to internationally accepted standards. Emirates already produces such reports.

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