https://youtu.be/TfIAEyugkdw?si=UN8tkZq10GFKKIZl
Arctus Aerospace talks about 24 hr coverage of earth observation using aircraft at 45000 ft. Application is for commercial image sales.
Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
DRDO tests India’s first indigenous glide weapon system TARA
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ne ... 948862.cms
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ne ... 948862.cms
This weapon system marks India's first glide weapon to utilise state-of-the-art low-cost systems. As per the Defence Ministry, the kit development has been undertaken with Development cum Production Partners (DcPP) & other Indian industries, which have already commenced the production activity.
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Captive trials was done last year from Jaguar
https://x.com/shreedharsingh9/status/18 ... 9276610888
@shreedharsingh9
TaRA guidance kit

https://x.com/i/status/2052610773026021643
@DRDO_India
Maiden flight-trial of Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation (TARA) weapon was successfully conducted off the coast of Odisha on May 07, 2026.
TARA, the modular range extension kit, is India’s first indigenous glide weapon system to convert unguided warheads into precision guided weapons.

https://x.com/shreedharsingh9/status/18 ... 9276610888
@shreedharsingh9
TaRA guidance kit
https://x.com/i/status/2052610773026021643
@DRDO_India
Maiden flight-trial of Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation (TARA) weapon was successfully conducted off the coast of Odisha on May 07, 2026.
TARA, the modular range extension kit, is India’s first indigenous glide weapon system to convert unguided warheads into precision guided weapons.
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Pune based Nibe Defense test fired the Suryastra Rocket system. 2 rockets with range of 150 Kms and 300Kms were tested.
Nibe Defense also tested the Varun Astra loitering ammunition at Joshimath and Pokhran. It has a range of 100Km with very high accuracy, with CEP of 1 meter.
Atmanirbhar Bharat is truly becoming more and more Israel Nirbhar Bharat. Both of the above systems are Israeli systems with a try colour painted on them. Even the minimum indigenous content requirement is just a game, which can be very easily manipulated.
Sad state of affairs.
Nibe Defense also tested the Varun Astra loitering ammunition at Joshimath and Pokhran. It has a range of 100Km with very high accuracy, with CEP of 1 meter.
Atmanirbhar Bharat is truly becoming more and more Israel Nirbhar Bharat. Both of the above systems are Israeli systems with a try colour painted on them. Even the minimum indigenous content requirement is just a game, which can be very easily manipulated.
Sad state of affairs.
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Indian indigneous capability is finding market while our forces keep import. Then there is another aspect of foreign manufacturers setting up base for export to their Worldwide customers keeping cost low. Our forces need to adapt more True Made in India indigenous systems over imported and Screw in India items, especially in all sectors where we have strength. The import lobby is shifting to Screw in India lobby.
Rising Indian defence exports highlight a growing strategic counterweight to China's dominant global manufacturing capabilities: Report,
https://defence.in/threads/rising-india ... ort.17818/
Rising Indian defence exports highlight a growing strategic counterweight to China's dominant global manufacturing capabilities: Report,
https://defence.in/threads/rising-india ... ort.17818/
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Beyond Screwdrivergiri: Reimagining Atmanirbharta in Defence Sector
https://www.thestatesman.com/defence/be ... 99190.html
28 May 2026
https://www.thestatesman.com/defence/be ... 99190.html
28 May 2026
The armed forces would want the self-reliance push to lead to faster invocation cycles and higher scales of production.
-
Manish_Sharma
- BRF Oldie
- Posts: 5381
- Joined: 07 Sep 2009 16:17
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
https://x.com/VictorVonS_/status/206000 ... 24814?s=20
India Is Quietly Building A Private Military-Industrial Empire Under Modi
Most people still do not understand what is actually happening inside India’s defence sector right now.
This is not just another “Make in India” initiative.
This is not merely about manufacturing weapons domestically.
This is a strategic attempt to transform India from one of the world’s largest arms importers into a sovereign military-industrial power.
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For decades, India depended heavily on foreign weapons.
Russia supplied fighter jets.
France supplied submarines and Rafales.
Israel supplied drones and missile systems.
America supplied surveillance systems and engines.
India had manpower.
India had engineers.
India had money.
But India did not fully control its own military-industrial ecosystem.
And that created a dangerous strategic vulnerability.
Because in modern warfare, the country controlling your spare parts, software upgrades, ammunition supply chains and maintenance cycles can indirectly control your military readiness.
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Delhi understood this reality very clearly after repeated geopolitical shocks.
→ Russia-Ukraine war disrupted global defence supply chains
→ Western sanctions exposed strategic dependency risks
→ China rapidly accelerated military modernization
→ Pakistan continued proxy warfare and cross-border terrorism
→ Drone warfare transformed modern battlefield doctrine
→ AI warfare began reshaping military planning globally
→ Emergency procurement after Operation Sindoor exposed production limitations
That is why the Modi government has now decided to fundamentally redesign India’s defence architecture.
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And this is where the biggest shift is happening.
Private Indian companies are now being pushed into sectors once monopolized almost entirely by state-run defence PSUs.
This is historic.
Because for decades, India’s defence manufacturing ecosystem moved slowly under bureaucratic structures.
But future wars will not wait for paperwork.
Future wars demand:
→ rapid innovation
→ AI integration
→ autonomous systems
→ drone swarms
→ stealth manufacturing
→ missile saturation capability
→ electronic warfare
→ scalable wartime production
→ real-time battlefield networking
The government knows state-run companies alone cannot handle the scale and speed future warfare requires anymore.
So India is now opening the gates to private industry.
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And the crown jewel of this transformation is the AMCA program.
India’s own 5th-generation stealth fighter project.
This is not just another aircraft.
AMCA represents India’s attempt to enter the elite stealth fighter club currently dominated by:
→ America
→ China
→ Russia
And for the first time in Indian history, private consortiums are being allowed deep participation in one of the country’s most sensitive military programs.
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A consortium simply means multiple companies joining together temporarily to execute one gigantic strategic project.
Because no single company possesses all the expertise required for a stealth fighter ecosystem.
One company may specialize in stealth composites.
Another in radar systems.
Another in propulsion integration.
Another in avionics architecture.
Another in mission software and AI systems.
Another in precision aerospace manufacturing.
So they combine capabilities and jointly build the platform.
This is exactly how advanced military powers operate globally.
America built its military-industrial dominance not through one giant government factory, but through entire ecosystems of competing private defence giants like:
→ Lockheed Martin
→ Northrop Grumman
→ Boeing
→ Raytheon
→ SpaceX
India is now attempting to build its own version of that ecosystem.
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And the urgency behind it is impossible to miss.
The timelines now emerging around AMCA reveal that Delhi is no longer treating this like another slow-moving defence file.
This increasingly resembles a wartime industrial mobilization model.
The timelines are brutal.
→ Month 30: Structural completion + maiden flight target
→ Month 64: All 5 prototypes flying
→ Month 84: 1,800+ test sorties + certification
Those schedules are extraordinarily aggressive for a first indigenous 5th-generation stealth fighter program.
Especially for a country simultaneously building its stealth manufacturing ecosystem almost from scratch.
Translation?
India is done tolerating endless defence delays.
Delhi now understands the geopolitical clock is ticking loudly.
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And the operational roadmap makes the urgency even clearer:
→ 2026/27: Prototype rollout begins
→ 2028/29: First flight
→ 2032: Type certification
→ 2035: Squadron induction starts
Most people are missing what this really means.
India is trying to compress nearly 40 years of aerospace-industrial evolution into barely one decade.
That is extraordinary pressure on the system.
Because the true nightmare is not designing the aircraft.
The real nightmare is integration.
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This is the true “Valley of Death” for every stealth fighter program on Earth.
And this is where even global aerospace giants bleed billions in delays and failures.
India now has to simultaneously master:
→ GE-F414 engine integration inside stealth architecture
→ Diverterless Supersonic Intakes (DSI)
→ Radar Absorbent Material (RAM) production at scale
→ Sensor fusion
→ AI-assisted avionics
→ Electronic warfare integration
→ Real-time combat networking
→ Software-defined battlefield systems
→ Low observable manufacturing precision
This is no longer just aerospace engineering.
This is systems civilization engineering.
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And that is exactly why consortiums matter so much.
The winner of AMCA will not simply be an aircraft manufacturer.
The winner must become India’s first true military systems integrator.
That requires:
→ Digital Twin simulation capability
→ Real-time integration with ADA and DRDO
→ Massive MSME supplier ecosystems
→ Precision manufacturing at scale
→ AI-driven testing and simulation
→ Rapid iterative development cycles
This is far bigger than one fighter jet.
AMCA is becoming a national stress test for whether India can build a parallel private military-industrial complex powerful enough to compete globally.
Because modern wars are no longer won only by soldiers.
Modern wars are won by industrial ecosystems capable of innovating, adapting and scaling faster than enemies.
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And the transformation goes beyond fighter jets.
Projects like the Suryastra long-range rocket system reveal the direction India is moving toward.
Developed by Pune-based Nibe Limited in partnership with Israel’s Elbit Systems, Suryastra represents India’s growing push into advanced precision warfare systems.
Capabilities include:
→ 150-300 km strike range
→ loitering munitions
→ precision deep-strike capability
→ multi-caliber deployment systems
This is the kind of battlefield architecture modern warfare increasingly depends upon.
Not massive tank formations alone.
But precision stand-off destruction powered by drones, missiles, AI and integrated battlefield systems.
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And now India is even considering opening ballistic missile manufacturing to private firms.
That would have been almost unimaginable a decade ago.
But the deeper geopolitical message is now becoming very clear.
India no longer wants to merely BUY military power.
India wants to BUILD military power.
And eventually EXPORT military power globally.
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Delhi’s long-term ambition is extremely clear:
To become one of the world’s top defence exporters by 2047.
And the numbers are already moving rapidly.
India’s defence exports crossed ₹38,000 crore ($4.2 billion), recording growth of more than 62% in a single financial year.
But this is not only about economics.
Defence exports create geopolitical influence.
When countries buy your weapons, they eventually depend on your:
→ spare parts
→ maintenance ecosystems
→ software upgrades
→ ammunition supply chains
→ training systems
→ strategic support
And slowly, military exports evolve into geopolitical alignment networks.
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That is why America exports weapons.
That is why Russia exports weapons.
That is why China aggressively pushes military sales globally.
Weapons are not merely products.
Weapons are geopolitical relationships.
And India now wants a permanent seat at that table.
Because future global power will not belong only to countries with large populations or large economies.
It will belong to countries capable of independently designing, integrating, manufacturing and scaling advanced warfare systems under crisis conditions.
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That is the real story unfolding right now.
For decades, India was one of the world’s largest arms buyers.
The Modi government now wants India to become one of the world’s defining arms builders.
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Bombs away. Finally some common sense dawning on the decision makers to look inward for things like bombs and kits and dusting off old projects for testing and into manufacturing.
How DRDO Is Making Foreign Arms Dealers Nervous
How DRDO Is Making Foreign Arms Dealers Nervous
Re: Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: News & Discussion
Nagastra, Harop, ULPGM-V3: Inside India's Lethal Drone Arsenal That's Now Ready for the World
India's drone market is racing from $654 million in 2024 to $1.437 billion by 2029 — and the fuel driving this boom is not peacetime ambition. It is war. Operation Sindoor, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the Iran-Israel confrontation have together transformed how India's defence establishment views unmanned systems. The Nagastra-1, deployable from two backpacks, can strike 40 kilometres away. The ULPGM-V3, freshly cleared for mass production after trials in Andhra Pradesh, hunts tanks, helicopters, and enemy drones at 10 kilometres. Bengaluru-built SkyStrikers levelled terror camps. And now Vietnam, the Philippines, Egypt, and the UAE are watching. India's drone ambition is shifting from importer to exporter — from user to manufacturer. But experts warn that assembling imported components is not sovereignty. Real power lies in owning the software, sensors, AI, and supply chains that make a drone truly lethal and truly Indian.
India's drone market is racing from $654 million in 2024 to $1.437 billion by 2029 — and the fuel driving this boom is not peacetime ambition. It is war. Operation Sindoor, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the Iran-Israel confrontation have together transformed how India's defence establishment views unmanned systems. The Nagastra-1, deployable from two backpacks, can strike 40 kilometres away. The ULPGM-V3, freshly cleared for mass production after trials in Andhra Pradesh, hunts tanks, helicopters, and enemy drones at 10 kilometres. Bengaluru-built SkyStrikers levelled terror camps. And now Vietnam, the Philippines, Egypt, and the UAE are watching. India's drone ambition is shifting from importer to exporter — from user to manufacturer. But experts warn that assembling imported components is not sovereignty. Real power lies in owning the software, sensors, AI, and supply chains that make a drone truly lethal and truly Indian.