
Think about the wars your grandparents knew. Two sides, drawn up on opposing lines. Victory belonged to whoever sent more men, held more territory, and absorbed more punishment. Then came the Second World War, tanks rolled across borders, aircraft controlled the skies, and industrial output became as decisive as troop strength.
By the time your parents were young, the equation had shifted again. Missiles could travel thousands of kilometres before a soldier ever left the barracks. Nuclear arsenals rewrote the rules of deterrence entirely.
And now? The generation growing up today is watching the rules rewritten once more, only faster, and far more fundamentally.
$20,000 drone forces adversaries to exhaust $4 million interceptors in response, draining defender resources and making the cost of protection far greater than the cost of attack. What was once a niche capability is now reshaping the economics, geography, and outcome of modern conflict. Indigenous long-range missile systems like Project Kusha are redefining how nations defend their skies.
Nationwide multi-tiered shields like Mission Sudarshan Chakra are drawing a protective arc across entire countries. Quantum-secured networks are making communications interception-proof. And these are among the more prominent expressions of a transformation that runs far deeper and wider across India’s entire defence ecosystem.
Dominance is no longer decided solely by troop strength or firepower, but by the speed of decision-making, the precision of targeting, and the depth of technological integration across every domain: air, land, sea, space, and cyberspace.
India, long categorised as a mass-based military with heavy dependence on foreign procurement, is making a move most retail investors haven’t fully priced in yet, quietly but purposefully building a defence architecture that mirrors, and in select domains challenges, the ambitions of far larger military economies.
This blog unpacks some of those capabilities, the numbers behind them, and why this structural shift matters for investors with a long-term view.
Three structural shifts emerged from these conflicts that every defence-focused investor must understand:
This is how modern drone warfare looks today, asymmetric, economically disruptive, and geographically unbounded. But India is not limiting its strength in this domain to low-cost strike drones alone.
Across loitering munitions, tactical surveillance UAVs, and counter-drone systems, India is building a broad, indigenous drone ecosystem, with a growing number of private and public sector companies committing serious industrial capability to every layer of it.
What is taking shape is not a response to a single threat but a deliberate, multi-layered build-out of sovereign drone capability that spans the full spectrum of modern unmanned warfare.
A) The Loitering Munitions Layer
Loitering munitions drones that hover over a target area and strike with precision on command represent the broadest and most diverse industrial participation in India’s drone ecosystem.
Unlike conventional strike drones that follow a pre-set path, loitering munitions give commanders the ability to observe, decide, and strike in real time, making them one of the most tactically flexible weapons in modern warfare.
B) The Surveillance Layer
Modern drone warfare is not won by strike platforms alone. Knowing where the threat is, tracking how it moves, and delivering that intelligence to decision-makers faster than the adversary can act, that is equally decisive. India’s tactical surveillance UAV ecosystem is being built with precisely this urgency in mind.
Some of the most prominent names in India’s defence industry are actively building and deploying surveillance drone capabilities, each bringing a distinct edge to this critical segment and representing only a fraction of the growing number of Indian companies converging on this space:
IdeaForge Technology Ltd, India’s leading UAV manufacturer, has built its position here through two battle-tested platforms that have already earned the Indian Army’s confidence in the most demanding conditions:
Tata Advanced Systems Ltd is adding depth to India’s indigenous surveillance capability through the IVTOL 20, which is currently in its pre-induction stage.
IVOTL 20 is a vertical take-off and landing surveillance drone designed specifically for India’s high-altitude border frontiers, engineered to operate where conventional surveillance assets struggle to function.
C) The Counter-Drone Layer

The following are some of the recent developments by Indian companies across both Soft Kill and Hard Kill segments, reflecting a deliberate and accelerating push to build credible, indigenous counter-drone solutions from the ground up:
1 ) Zen Technologies Ltd:
2) Paras Defence & Space Technologies Ltd:
Every layer of offensive capability being constructed is matched by an equally deliberate effort to build the defensive architecture that protects India from the same threats it is learning to deploy.
Across strike platforms, loitering munitions, surveillance UAVs, and counter-drone systems India is building a sovereign, full-spectrum drone industry with indigenous conviction at its core.
The Government of India has now institutionalised this momentum through Mission Drone Shakti — a ₹1,600 to ₹1,800 crore scheme over five years with one clear goal: to eliminate dependence on Chinese drone components and build every part that goes inside a drone, right here in India.
In a battlefield increasingly shaped by stealth, autonomy and long-range precision, India needs platforms that can strike deep without exposing pilots to hostile air defences.
The Ghatak UCAV is being developed for exactly that role a 13-ton flying-wing unmanned combat aircraft built for contested airspace, backed by a government-cleared programme budget of ₹39,000 crore.
With its low-observable design, internal weapons bay and AI-driven mission capability, Ghatak marks India’s move from conventional airpower to next-generation autonomous strike warfare.

Three things set it apart:
Ghatak is proof that India’s defence ambition has finally caught up with its technological capability.
Every drone and missile capability India builds on the offensive side raises an equally urgent question on the defensive side: who is protecting Indian airspace from the same threat? That is precisely the gap that Project Kusha is designed to close.
For context, India’s most advanced long-range air defence asset today is the S-400 Triumf System, procured from Russia under a $5.43 billion deal signed in 2018. It is a capable system but it is also a foreign one. That means logistical dependencies, geopolitical strings, and zero control over software, integration pathways, or future upgrades.

Project Kusha is India’s indigenous alternative, a layered, long-range surface-to-air missile system built around three interceptor variants, each calibrated to a different threat range:
The logic of this tiered design is both elegant and critical. The layered structure ensures that even if one layer is saturated or breached, subsequent layers can engage the target, thereby increasing overall kill probability.
No single point of failure.
No single point of foreign dependence.
And because it is built entirely within India’s own ecosystem, Project Kusha provides full control over software, integration, and future upgrades and integrates seamlessly into India’s Integrated Air Command and Control System.
For investors, this translates into a programme that generates sustained demand across radar systems, propulsion technology, command software, and electronics manufacturing, all increasingly served by domestic players.
Project Kusha addresses the threat in the sky. But modern warfare rarely arrives from a single direction- missiles, drone swarms, cyber-attacks, and strikes on critical infrastructure can arrive simultaneously across multiple fronts. Mission Sudarshan Chakra is built for precisely that reality, a unified, nationwide shield that integrates every layer of India’s defence into one coordinated system.

Announced in August 2025 and drawing its name from the weapon of Lord Krishna, the Sudarshan Chakra Program is India’s most ambitious defence initiative to date, a nationwide defence shield targeting full operational capability by 2035. Its scope goes far beyond what any single system can accomplish.
Providing layered protection for strategic assets and civilian infrastructure while ensuring strategic autonomy through full indigenisation of R&D and manufacturing.
Beyond interception, it will also offer precision counterstrike capacities and anti-cyber warfare measures to neutralise digital threats including hacking and phishing at a national scale.
To appreciate the scale of this ambition, consider the two global benchmarks India is measured against:
1) Israel’s Iron Dome : The 90% Standard
2) The United States’ Golden Dome : The Next Frontier
A) Imagine an Indian Navy submarine, deep underwater, in the middle of a critical wartime operation. It intercepts vital intelligence — but the communication channel back to the control room is compromised, delayed, or worse, decoded by the enemy. In that moment, the advantage doesn’t belong to the side with the bigger fleet.
It belongs to the side with the faster, more secure line of communication. “What makes quantum communication a game-changer is precisely this — if an enemy ever attempts to intercept or decode that communication, the data itself changes and the breach is immediately detected, making undetected eavesdropping physically impossible”.
In modern warfare, that margin — of speed and security — is often the difference between a mission succeeded and a mission lost. That is precisely the problem quantum communication is built to solve.
B) China currently leads in real-world quantum communication deployment, giving it an edge in narrow but sensitive regions where early warning and unbreakable secure links define operational advantage. India is closing that gap faster than most anticipated.

C) India’s National Quantum Mission (NQM) has an ambitious mandate: satellite-based secure quantum communications between ground stations spanning 2,000 kilometres domestically, long-distance quantum-secured channels with partner nations, and inter-city Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) networks.
In January 2026, the mission gained further strategic weight when India unveiled its Military Quantum Mission Policy Framework, embedding four critical pillars of quantum technology across its armed services:

What has made headlines is not merely the ambition but the pace of execution. India achieved a 1,000-kilometre quantum communication network in under two years — a feat originally projected to take eight years. This milestone puts India firmly on course to realise its full 2,000-km vision well ahead of schedule.
D) The implications reach far beyond a laboratory record. This technology delivers interception-proof communication for defence operations, financial systems, and critical national infrastructure — domains where a security breach is not a compliance issue but a national emergency. What makes it even more powerful is its versatility — engineered to function across underwater and underground environments, extending India’s strategic reach into some of the most operationally challenging terrains.
What it watches and how:
In modern warfare, the side that sees first, decides first. SBS-3 ensures India builds those eyes itself.
The capabilities discussed above represent India’s headline programmes, but the pipeline runs deeper. Two additional systems deserve attention from any investor building a view on India’s long-term defence trajectory:
QRSAM — Intercepting Every Threat, From Every Direction
BRAHMOS-II: INDIA’S LEAP INTO HYPERSONIC WARFARE
BrahMos-II is the next leap, a hypersonic weapon being developed jointly by BrahMos Aerospace and DRDO, designed to operate in a domain where very few nations have ever ventured.

What makes BrahMos-II fundamentally different:
Once developed, BrahMos-II would place India in an elite and exclusive club, where only Russia and China currently hold operational hypersonic cruise missile capability, while the United States, France, Japan, and Australia remain in active development.
For a nation that has historically been a consumer of frontier defence technology, crossing into this league would mark a defining moment in India’s strategic journey.
Step back and look at what India is assembling:
• A sovereign drone industry : spanning offensive strike platforms, loitering munitions, surveillance UAVs, and counter-drone systems
• Project Kusha : layered interceptor shields built entirely within India’s own ecosystem
• Mission Sudarshan Chakra : a nationwide, multi-domain defence umbrella covering air, missile, cyber, and civil defence
• SBS-3 : space-based surveillance watching every border, in real time, through any weather
• Quantum-secured communications : interception-proof links that no adversary can crack
• BrahMos-II : a hypersonic missile programme that would place India in an elite global league
A pattern becomes unmistakable: technology is no longer a supplementary element of India’s defence posture. It is the foundation of it.
Each programme discussed in this blog reflects a deliberate pivot, away from foreign procurement and imported platforms, toward sovereign capabilities engineered for India’s specific threat environment and strategic priorities. That is not a policy trend.
It is a structural economic shift, one that creates a multi-decade procurement pipeline flowing directly into domestic manufacturers, system integrators, electronics companies, and deep-tech startups.
For retail investors, the context is worth holding global uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, and escalating conflicts are making defence self-reliance not just a strategic goal but a commercial imperative.
The Defence Forces Vision 2047 institutionalises this momentum, creating a future-ready military through dedicated Space, Cyber, and Drone Forces and anchoring it to a clear policy roadmap and sustained capital allocation.
As the trajectory of indigenisation accelerates, India is not merely closing the technological gap. It is building a sovereign, technology-driven arsenal one that is purposeful, indigenous, and built for the battles of tomorrow. For the patient investor, that is a story worth tracking from the very beginning.