INS Dhruv: India’s Ocean sentinel for missile tracking and strategic surveillance
By Aroonim Bhuyan
New Delhi, INS Dhruv is one of the most sophisticated and least publicly discussed platforms in the Indian naval inventory – a dedicated missile range instrumentation and strategic research vessel designed to track ballistic missile tests, monitor space activity, and support India’s long-range deterrence architecture. Built indigenously by Hindustan Shipyard Limited, the ship represents a rare fusion of naval engineering, advanced sensors, and strategic intelligence capability.
Commissioned into the Indian Navy in 2021, INS Dhruv operates at the intersection of maritime domain awareness, missile telemetry, and electronic intelligence – roles that very few navies in the world have mastered with dedicated platforms.
A unique class of strategic vessel
INS Dhruv is officially classified as a Missile Range Instrumentation Ship (MRIS). Its primary task is to track and record data from ballistic missile and anti-satellite (ASAT) tests conducted by India. During such tests, land-based radars lose track of a missile once it travels beyond the horizon. Dhruv fills this gap by positioning itself deep in the ocean along the missile’s flight path, capturing crucial telemetry, trajectory, and performance data.
This capability is essential for programmes run by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), especially for long-range systems such as intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
Built for strategic missions
Constructed at Visakhapatnam by HSL with significant inputs from the National Technical Research Organisation and DRDO, Dhruv is designed less like a conventional warship and more like a floating high-tech laboratory and surveillance post.
Key characteristics (public domain estimates):
- Displacement: ~15,000 tonnes
- Length: ~175 metres
- Advanced long-range tracking radars housed in large domes
- lectronic intelligence (ELINT) and signal intelligence (SIGINT) suites
- Satellite communication and space-tracking capability
- Endurance for long deployments in distant oceans
The most striking visual feature of the ship is the pair of massive radar domes on its deck, which house active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars capable of tracking objects thousands of kilometres away, including in near-space.
Role in ballistic missile and ASAT testing
INS Dhruv played a quiet but critical role after India’s 2019 ASAT test (Mission Shakti) by enabling extended tracking of space debris and validating missile performance in exo-atmospheric conditions. For future tests of systems such as India’s longer-range Agni variants and SLBMs, Dhruv provides real-time tracking data that cannot be obtained from land stations alone.
This makes the vessel central to the credibility of India’s nuclear triad, especially the sea-based deterrent.
Strategic surveillance in the Indo-Pacific
Beyond missile testing, Dhruv is also believed to perform electronic surveillance of missile launches and military activities in the wider Indo-Pacific region. From international waters, the ship can monitor missile tests conducted by other countries, gather electronic signatures, and build a valuable intelligence database.
This function places INS Dhruv in a category similar to the US Navy’s missile tracking ships and signals intelligence vessels.
A force multiplier for space and maritime domain awareness
With its ability to track objects in space and over long maritime distances, Dhruv contributes to: space situational awareness; monitoring of satellite activity; long-range maritime surveillance; and support for India’s growing space security interests
Its data is useful not only for the Navy but also for India’s civilian and military space establishments.
Why INS Dhruv matters
INS Dhruv is not a combat ship in the traditional sense. It carries no major weapons and is not designed for battle. Yet, strategically, it is among the most important assets India possesses because it strengthens missile development and validation, enhances credibility of India’s deterrence posture, expands India’s electronic intelligence reach into the oceans, and bridges the gap between naval capability, missile science, and space tracking
Very few countries operate such specialised vessels, placing India in an elite club with advanced maritime-space surveillance capability.
INS Dhruv symbolises a quiet but profound shift in India’s strategic posture – from a continental military power to a nation capable of monitoring, measuring, and mastering events across oceans and into space. Built indigenously and operating discreetly, the vessel underlines how modern naval power is no longer defined only by guns and missiles, but by sensors, data, and intelligence gathered far beyond the horizon.