Indian Army

The Indian Army’s Technology Roadmap for Future Warfare – Part 2

In Part 1, we explored how the Indian Army is rapidly embracing autonomous warfare through FPV kamikaze drones, high-altitude ISR swarms, VTOL strike UAVs, loiter munitions, and AI-enabled battlefield sensing systems. These technologies highlighted a clear shift in military doctrine from manpower-centric warfare toward intelligent, networked, and highly autonomous battlefield ecosystems.

But surveillance and reconnaissance are only one side of the transformation.

The next phase of India’s defence modernization focuses on something even more disruptive: autonomous combat engineering, AI-driven radar neutralisation swarms, electronic warfare resilience, and large-scale indigenous defence-tech ecosystems capable of supporting future wars.

From drone-based demolition systems capable of remotely neutralizing enemy infrastructure to intelligent swarm drones designed to overwhelm sophisticated air defence networks, the Indian Army’s future roadmap reveals how India is preparing not just to observe the battlefield but to dominate it through machine-speed warfare, distributed intelligence, and autonomous precision strike capability.

Equally important, these operational requirements are now driving a massive defence innovation ecosystem involving startups, AI companies, aerospace firms, semiconductor developers, and deep-tech manufacturers under initiatives such as iDEX, ADITI, DISC, and Make-I/II programs.

In this article we explores how India is now entering the next stage of its autonomous warfare revolution where AI, swarms, electronic warfare, and indigenous defence technology converge to redefine the future battlefield.

Drone-Based Wireless Demolition Systems: The Future of Combat Engineering

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Modern combat engineering operations increasingly require precision, speed, stand-off capability, and enhanced troop safety. Traditional demolition systems still expose soldiers to major risks during explosive deployment and detonation tasks. To address this challenge, the Indian Army is exploring drone-based wireless demolition and detonation systems capable of remotely deploying explosive payloads and conducting secure stand-off detonation operations.

The Operational Challenge

Conventional demolition systems face several limitations:

  • Physical wiring requirements
  • Close troop proximity to targets
  • Time-consuming preparation
  • Vulnerability to enemy observation and fire

Wireless systems improve mobility but still struggle with:

  • Limited operational range
  • Signal interruption
  • Terrain masking
  • Electronic interference

Why Drone-Based Demolition Matters

Drone-enabled demolition systems fundamentally transform combat engineering by allowing forces to:

  1. Conduct aerial reconnaissance
  2. Deliver explosive payloads remotely
  3. Provide live video surveillance
  4. Maintain stand-off positioning
  5. Execute secure wireless detonation

This dramatically improves:

  • Troop survivability
  • Operational flexibility
  • Tactical surprise
  • Precision deployment

Key Operational Requirements

The Army’s envisioned system includes:

  • Stability-optimized multirotor drones
  • Payload capacity up to 300 grams explosive
  • High-altitude operations at 4500–5000m AMSL
  • Minimum 4 km operational range
  • Encrypted communications
  • Real-time ISR integration

Tactical Applications

Such systems could support:

  • Bridge demolition
  • Bunker neutralization
  • Route denial operations
  • Infrastructure targeting
  • Special forces missions
  • Counter-terror operations

Strategic Importance

Developing indigenous drone-based demolition systems would require advances in:

  • Autonomous flight systems
  • Secure wireless detonation
  • Payload stabilization
  • High-altitude propulsion
  • Encrypted battlefield communications

This opens major opportunities for:

  • Indian drone startups
  • Defence electronics firms
  • Aerospace manufacturers
  • AI developers

AI-Enabled Swarm Drones for Radar Neutralisation

One of the most advanced concepts identified by the Indian Army is the development of AI-enabled swarm drones capable of autonomous radar neutralisation and Suppression of Enemy Air Defence (SEAD) missions.

This reflects India’s growing focus on:

  • Autonomous warfare
  • Electronic attack capability
  • Swarm intelligence
  • AI-driven combat systems

Why Radar Neutralisation Matters

Modern air defence networks combine:

  • Surveillance radars
  • Fire-control radars
  • Surface-to-air missile systems
  • Electronic warfare assets
  • Networked command systems

These systems are heavily defended and increasingly difficult to neutralize using traditional methods.

Limitations of Conventional SEAD

Traditional radar suppression approaches involve:

  • Manned aircraft strikes
  • Cruise missiles
  • Stand-off precision weapons

However, these methods face:

  • High operational cost
  • Risk to pilots
  • Limited saturation capability
  • Predictable attack profiles

Why Swarm Drones Are a Game Changer

Swarm warfare changes battlefield economics completely.

Instead of relying on a few expensive platforms, swarm systems deploy:

  • Large numbers of autonomous drones
  • Distributed intelligence
  • Adaptive attack behaviour
  • Coordinated electronic warfare

What Swarms Can Do

A coordinated swarm can simultaneously perform:

  • Reconnaissance
  • Electronic interference
  • Decoy operations
  • Radar saturation
  • Target identification
  • Kinetic attack coordination

This creates operational overload for enemy air defence systems.


Autonomous Warfare: The Next Battlefield Revolution

The Army’s requirement reflects a broader transition toward:

  • Distributed autonomous systems
  • Human-machine teaming
  • AI-enabled targeting
  • Collaborative machine intelligence

In such systems, each drone acts as:

  • A sensor
  • A communication node
  • A mission executor
  • A decision contributor

The swarm behaves like:
“A distributed intelligent organism.”


Key Operational Requirements

Multi-Platform Launch Capability

The Army wants swarms deployable from:

  • Vehicles
  • Aircraft
  • Canisters

This provides:

  • Tactical mobility
  • Rapid deployment
  • Saturation attack flexibility

Distributed Swarm Intelligence

Instead of centralized control, drones autonomously:

  • Share information
  • Reallocate tasks
  • Adapt to drone losses
  • Coordinate attack behaviour

This ensures:

  • Mission resilience
  • Faster battlefield adaptation
  • Greater survivability under EW attack

AI-Based Radar Detection

The swarm should autonomously:

  • Recognize radar emissions
  • Classify threats
  • Prioritize targets
  • Adapt attack routes dynamically

Secure Communications

Future swarm systems must resist:

  • GPS jamming
  • Signal interception
  • Swarm fragmentation
  • Cyber intrusion

This requires:

  • Encrypted networking
  • Anti-jamming capability
  • Adaptive frequency management
  • Distributed communications

India’s Defence Funding Ecosystem: Where the Money Is Going

These Army problem statements are not just theoretical concepts. Most directly align with ongoing Ministry of Defence modernization initiatives including:

  • iDEX (Innovations for Defence Excellence)
  • ADITI
  • Defence India Startup Challenge (DISC)
  • Army Design Bureau innovation programs
  • Emergency drone procurement initiatives
  • Make-I / Make-II projects

The policy direction is clear:
AI + Autonomous Systems + Drone Warfare + EW + Swarm Intelligence are now major funding priorities.


Current Defence Funding Structure

iDEX & ADITI Funding

The Indian government is aggressively funding defence startups.

ProgramApprox Funding
DISC Challenges₹1.5 crore
iDEX PRIMEUp to ₹10 crore
ADITI Deep-TechUp to ₹25 crore
DRISHTI Projects₹10–25 crore+

The government allocated approximately:
₹449.62 crore to iDEX & ADITI for FY 2025–26.

This is a strong signal that autonomous warfare technologies now have serious institutional backing.


Which Technologies Will Receive the Most Funding?

Based on current trends, the strongest traction exists in:

Technology AreaFunding Priority
Loitering MunitionsVery High
Swarm DronesVery High
High-Altitude ISRVery High
EW-Resilient DronesVery High
AI-enabled ISRVery High
Counter-Drone SystemsExtremely High
Mesh NetworkingHigh
FOPEN Radar DronesMedium-High

Why India Is Investing Aggressively

Several strategic developments accelerated this shift.

1. Lessons from the Russia-Ukraine War

The war demonstrated:

  • Cheap drones can destroy expensive systems
  • Loiter munitions are battlefield game changers
  • Swarms can overwhelm air defence systems
  • EW resilience is critical

This fundamentally changed military thinking worldwide.


2. India-China Border Dynamics

China is heavily investing in:

  • HALE drones
  • AI-enabled ISR
  • Autonomous logistics
  • Swarm systems
  • EW-integrated warfare

India’s Army problem statements directly reflect concerns regarding:

  • Surveillance gaps
  • High-altitude ISR limitations
  • Inter-valley communication challenges
  • Rapid reaction capability

3. Recent Drone Warfare Experiences

Recent operational lessons accelerated Indian interest in:

  • FPV drones
  • Tactical loiter munitions
  • Drone swarms
  • EW-resistant UAVs
  • Counter-drone systems

The focus has now shifted from prototypes to:
“deployable battlefield capability.”


Procurement Reality: Grants Are Only the Beginning

One major reality in India’s defence ecosystem is:
Grant funding does not guarantee procurement.

Many startups receive:

  • Prototype grants
  • Trial opportunities
  • Testing support

But later struggle because of:

  • Changing GSQRs
  • Procurement delays
  • Budget shifts
  • Bureaucratic transitions

The real breakthrough occurs when systems enter:

  • Emergency procurement
  • Limited series production
  • Fast-track acquisition

The Real Battlefield Trend: “Mass + Cheap + Autonomous”

The Indian military is increasingly shifting toward:
“Affordable autonomous mass warfare.”

Instead of depending entirely on:

  • Expensive fighters
  • Heavy missile systems
  • Large UAV platforms

Future doctrine increasingly emphasizes:

  • Autonomous swarms
  • FPV drones
  • Distributed ISR
  • Loitering munitions
  • AI-enabled networking

This is exactly why swarm systems and autonomous drones are receiving major attention.


India’s Emerging Defence-Tech Opportunity

If even a fraction of these projects move toward induction, India’s defence drone ecosystem could become a multi-billion-dollar market.

Estimated Opportunity Areas

SegmentEstimated Market
Loiter Munitions₹10,000–20,000 crore
Swarm Drones₹8,000–15,000 crore
Counter-Drone Systems₹15,000+ crore
Tactical ISR UAVs₹5,000–10,000 crore
EW & Mesh Networking₹5,000+ crore
High-Altitude Drone Systems₹8,000+ crore

These domains are likely to remain strategically funded for the next decade.


What the Ministry of Defence Really Wants

Across all these problem statements, the Ministry of Defence appears to prioritize:

Indigenous Core Technologies

  • Flight controllers
  • Navigation systems
  • AI stacks
  • Secure communications
  • EW resilience

Modular Open Architectures

Systems that can:

  • Upgrade rapidly
  • Support multiple payloads
  • Integrate into swarms

Battlefield Survivability

  • Anti-jamming capability
  • GPS-denied operations
  • Secure mesh networking

Scalable Manufacturing

The Army increasingly wants:
“Mass-producible systems, not boutique prototypes.”


Conclusion:

India’s Autonomous Warfare Revolution Has Begun

These problem statements collectively represent far more than isolated technology requirements. They form a blueprint for India’s future battlefield architecture.

India is now actively building:

  • Indigenous autonomous warfare ecosystems
  • AI-enabled battlefield networks
  • Swarm combat capability
  • Tactical deep-strike drone infrastructure
  • Persistent ISR systems
  • Next-generation electronic warfare capability

The convergence of:

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Swarm intelligence
  • Drone autonomy
  • Secure communications
  • Advanced sensors
  • Electronic warfare
  • Indigenous semiconductors

is laying the foundation for a new era of Indian military transformation.

For Indian startups, MSMEs, aerospace firms, semiconductor companies, AI developers, and defence innovators, this may become the largest defence-tech opportunity India has seen in decades.

The future battlefield will be:

  • Autonomous
  • Intelligent
  • Networked
  • Data-driven
  • AI-enabled

India has now clearly signalled its intent to become a major player in that future. The coming years are likely to witness the rise of:

  • Indigenous combat drone ecosystems 
  • AI-enabled battlefield networks 
  • Autonomous surveillance grids 
  • Swarm warfare capabilities 
  • Next-generation electronic warfare systems 
  • Deep-tech defence manufacturing at scale 

This is not simply defence modernization.

It is the beginning of India’s autonomous warfare revolution and for Indian innovators willing to build, collaborate, and scale transformative technologies, this may become the defining defence-tech opportunity of the 21st century.

Sheikh Akhter

Warfare & Defense Systems l Military Equipment Intelligence | OSINT I Content, Insights & Strategy | Leadership | Solutions | Policy | A&D Consulting

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