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Five Strategic Takeaways from Ran Samvad 2025: India’s Military Transformation Unveiled

By Ninad D Sheth

The Dawn of Beyond Visual Range Supremacy

Mhow. The inaugural Ran Samvad 2025 conclave at Army War College Mhow has crystallised India’s evolving military doctrine, with stand-off weapons and beyond visual range (BVR) missiles emerging as the cornerstone of future air combat superiority. Operation Sindoor’s deployment of advanced precision systems—including BrahMos, SCALP, Rampage, and Crystal Maze missiles—demonstrated India’s capability to strike targets at distances of 250-450 kilometres while avoiding and nutralizingy Chinese HQ-9 air defence systems.

Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh’s revelation that India achieved “five confirmed kills and one large aircraft” during Operation Sindoor, with one target eliminated at an unprecedented 300-kilometre range, underscores the transformative impact of BVR technology. The integration of Russia’s R-37M hypersonic missile onto India’s Su-30MKI fleet promises to extend this advantage, with the missile’s 300-kilometre range more than doubling conventional BVR capabilities.

IAF’s successful testing of the indigenous Astra missile with RF seeker technology represents a crucial milestone in achieving strategic autonomy. With extended-range variants under development capable of engaging targets beyond 200 kilometres, India is positioning itself to dominate the aerial battlefield through technological superiority.

The Navy is also in the long range stand off game . Vice Admiral Sobti articulated this “One of the key takeaways is the use of long-range vectors, the ability to influence land and sea-based targets without crossing into enemy territory. The Navy is very much into that. And therefore, military targets, as well as economic targets on land, which have always been a priority for us, become a higher priority.”

Air Power as Primary Option: Strategic Doctrinal Shift

Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan’s emphatic declaration that Air Chief Marshal Singh’s analysis of Operation Sindoor reveals that air power has transitioned from being a last resort to India’s primary kinetic option—a transformation that reflects both technological advancement and strategic maturation.

The successful execution of precision strikes within a 23-minute window, coupled with seamless tri-service coordination under CDS guidance, demonstrates that India’s military has evolved beyond traditional service-centric operations. This doctrinal shift positions air power not merely as support for ground operations but as the primary instrument of strategic effect.

First Strike Survival: The Drone Warfare Imperative

The extensive use of over 1,000 drones during the India-Pakistan exchange in May 2025 has fundamentally altered threat perceptions, necessitating massive investment in protective infrastructure. India’s deployment of Israeli Harop, Harpy, and indigenous Nagastra-1 systems, taking on Pakistani Turkish Bayraktar TB2s and Chinese Wing Loong IIs, represents the first formal drone war in South Asian history.

CDS General Chauhan’s stark warning that “peace without power is utopian” encapsulates the reality that military assets—particularly high-value aircraft—face unprecedented vulnerability in the drone age. The successful testing of India’s Bhargavastra counter-drone system, capable of neutralising swarm attacks through multi-layered defence comprising unguided micro-rockets and guided micro-missiles, demonstrates the scale of investment required.

The integration of electronic warfare capabilities with kinetic counter-drone systems reflects India’s understanding that first strike survival depends not merely on hardened shelters but on active, multi-spectrum defence networks. This realisation has accelerated procurement of additional S-400 systems and development of indigenous Project Kusha long-range air defence missiles.

Sudarshan Chakra: Multi-Domain Shield Architecture

PM Modi’s announcement of Mission Sudarshan Chakra represents India’s most ambitious defence modernisation programme, envisioning a “multi-layered integrated air and missile defence shield” by 2035. The system’s conceptualisation as both defensive shield and offensive sword—capable of “hitting back at the adversary many times more”—reflects sophisticated understanding of deterrence dynamics.

The technological architecture encompasses overlapping early-warning sensors, robust command and control posts, land and sea-based interceptor batteries, and space-based assets for threat tracking. Unlike Israel’s Iron Dome, designed for a compact territory, Sudarshan Chakra must protect a subcontinent-sized nation, requiring unprecedented integration of indigenous and imported systems.

The initiative’s emphasis on “complete security cover” for strategic, civilian, and cultural sites demonstrates comprehensive threat assessment.

Indigenous Weapons: Modular, Agile, and Intelligent

India’s defence industrial transformation is exemplified by the evolution from platform-centric to capability-centric weapon systems. The successful testing of DRDO’s UAV-launched precision guided missile (ULPGM-V3) with three modular warhead options—anti-armour, penetration-cum-blast, and fragmentation—demonstrates the shift toward adaptable, mission-specific systems.

The Smart Anti-Airfield Weapon (SAAW) programme illustrates this modular philosophy, with the 125-kilogram precision-guided bomb achieving 100-kilometre standoff range while maintaining cost-effectiveness through aircraft propulsion utilisation. Its integration across multiple platforms—Jaguar, Su-30MKI, with planned Rafale and Tejas compatibility—exemplifies agile weapon system architecture.

Intelligence integration is evident in systems like the Astra missile’s indigenous RF seeker, providing “pin-point accuracy” through autonomous target acquisition and engagement. The development of solid fuel ducted ramjet (SFDR) technology aims to surpass Meteor missile performance while maintaining sovereign control over critical guidance algorithms.

Private Sector Integration: Industrial Alliance

India’s Defence Tango: When Industry Meets the Military

In the grand theatre of global arms production, India has long played the role of enthusiastic importer, splashing out billions on foreign kit while its own factories hummed with little more than assembly-line echoes. But a quiet revolution is afoot, as private conglomerates cosy up to the armed forces in a bid to forge a truly home-grown arsenal. This budding romance between boardrooms and barracks, epitomised by the race to build the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), signals a shift from dependence to self-reliance—or, as sceptics might quip, from begging bowl to blacksmith’s forge.

At the heart of this transformation are titans like Larsen & Toubro (L&T) and Tata Advanced Systems Limited (TASL), but they are merely the vanguard. L&T, with its sprawling empire in engineering, has earmarked defence as a “multi-billion dollar segment,” pouring resources into everything from warships and armoured vehicles to missile systems. Its Rs 200-crore fund for startups targets esoteric niches like launching systems and radars, betting that innovation will yield both profits and patriotism. TASL, meanwhile, straddles aerospace structures, unmanned drones, and radar tech, positioning itself as a one-stop shop for high-stakes hardware. Their potential consortium for the AMCA—a stealthy fifth-generation fighter jet—could redefine public-private tie-ups, blending corporate agility with state oversight.

Yet this is no isolated dalliance. Across India Inc, firms are stepping into the fray. Bharat Electronics, a public-sector stalwart, collaborates with private players on electronic warfare systems, while Mahindra Defence teams up with the navy for anti-submarine vessels. The Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), once a monopoly in aircraft, now partners with Adani Defence on drones and avionics. Even smaller outfits, like those in the burgeoning startup ecosystem, are chipping in with AI-driven surveillance and cyber-defence tools. The government’s Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative, launched amid the pandemic’s gloom in 2020, has turbocharged this synergy, banning imports of 101 defence items and mandating local content in procurements. The result? A defence budget where indigenous spending has surged from a paltry 40% a decade ago to over 70% today, with private firms snagging a growing slice.

The military, for its part, is shedding its bureaucratic armour. At the Ran Samvad 2025 conclave, Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan hailed “jointmanship” as the bedrock of reform, weaving together doctrine, technology, and industrial policy. Gone are the days of siloed services squabbling over turf; now, integrated commands demand seamless collaboration, pulling in industry for everything from hypersonic missiles to quantum-secure communications.

This industrial-military waltz is not without its missteps. Bureaucratic red tape still snarls approvals, and technology transfers from abroad remain patchy—witness the delays in the Tejas fighter

By nurturing a domestic defence-industrial base, India inches towards strategic autonomy, reducing vulnerability to geopolitical whims—be it American sanctions or Russian supply snags amid the Ukraine war. For a nation eyeing great-power status, this partnership could prove transformative, turning imported vulnerabilities into indigenous strengths. As global tensions simmer, from the South China Sea to Eastern Europe, India’s bet on self-sufficiency might just pay off. Or, in the wry words of an old strategist, it could ensure that the next war is fought with weapons made at home, not bought from afar.

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