Chanakya Defence Dialogue 2025: India’s Strategic Reckoning
By Ninad Sheth
New Delhi. The Chanakya Defence Dialogue 2025 at the hallowed Manekshaw Centre, focused on “Reform to Transform: Sashakt, Surakshit aur Viksit Bharat.” Military preparedness topped the agenda. Advanced sensors drove discussions as Indian war readiness took centre stage. It encapsulated that India’s strategic mindset evolves rapidly
President of India Droupadi Murmu, who inaugurated the high profile seminar, set the tone by pointing out that “our Forces have always displayed remarkable adaptivity.” With rapidly evolving technologies in warfare, the Indian Armed Forces have to be a step ahead to meet the challenges of both newer technologies and speed in their employment.
The CDS. General Anil Chauhan set the tone, when he spoke on “Future Wars: Strategic Posturing Through Military Power.” He stressed real-time adversary knowledge. In future battles, denying enemies self-awareness wins wars. “Military preparedness must reflect the new normal. Innovation, defence R&D, manufacturing, and diplomatic positioning must rest on real strength” he said.
Sensors form the backbone. Network-centric warfare demands them. Information dominance decides outcomes. India’s Joint Doctrine for Multi-Domain Operations (MDO), released August 2025, codifies this shift. It fuses land, sea, air, cyber, space, and cognitive domains. The Multi-Domain Operations Room (MDOR) ensures decision superiority.
Baba Kalyani, CMD of Bharat Forge, addressed “Changing Status Quo – Vitalising Defence Reforms.” Reforms spark innovation. They demand deep defence tech understanding. India boasts strong capabilities. Kalyani said that India must become products-driven as deep tech leads. World-class R&D can follows. Homegrown IPs seal it. Mr. Kalyani applauded the ₹1 lakh crore R&D fund for private sector.
Defence production in India according to government estimates hit ₹1.54 lakh crore in FY 2024-25. Indigenous output reached ₹1.27 lakh crore. This marks 174% growth since 2014-15. So there is scope for Atmanirbhar Bharat to delivers results.
Professor K. Vijay Raghavan an ex Principal Scientific Adviser, framed the long game. “Strategic superiority is not a destination but a continuous, long-term effort.” So as India invests across tech streams innovation for local threat perceptions must dominate.
Projects such as Sanjay exemplify sensor integration. The Army’s Battlefield Surveillance System delivers real-time awareness. It feeds artillery and commands. Satellite ISR backs it with automated platforms to cut latency.
There was consensus that 2025 marks the “Year of reforms “ as Procurement speeds up. Timelines tighten. Innovation embeds in bureaucracy. CDS Chauhan demands honesty from industry. Realistic timelines matter. No more delays. That was the running theme.
On the menu Jointness acceleration and Integrated Theatre Commands. Services it was noted at the conclave must align doctrines, even as tech platforms interoperate. For that a big challenge, Silos must crumble.
Regional threats sharpen focus. China builds along LAC. Pakistan tests proxies as hybrid wars multiply. Ukraine and Gaza offer lessons. Sensors win in new war as Data drives decisions.
Yet, Challenges persist.
R&D gaps linger sharply as tech absorption lags. Bureaucratic inertia fights back. DRDO reforms are a must if this conclave has to have meaning.
The dialogue signals maturity. Military, civilian, and industry must align. There is a new sense of Indian purpose in an uncertain, hair trigger world. Strategic thinking pivots as reactive security fades. The main outcome is that proactive deterrence rises.
Sensors and early warning anchor readiness. Tech ecosystems need space and larger cheques to bloom. Strategic superiority demands an almost daily effort.
Chanakya 2025 was about aweareness as India attempts transformation. As It readies for future wars. Preparedness at the general Manekshaw centre was seen as defining power. It will be a hard grind. But the nation is investing both money and political capital upfront.