Can’t win today’s war with yesterday’s weapons: Gen Chauhan
Referencing Operation Sindoor, India’s counter-offensive following the Pahalgam terror attack, CDS General Anil Chauhan noted that while Pakistan deployed loiter munitions and unarmed drones on 10 May, none caused damage.
PTI
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CDS General Anil Chauhan during a workshop-cum-exhibition in New Delhi (PTI)
New Delhi, 16 July
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Anil Chauhan on
Wednesday warned that India must urgently modernise its defence systems,
stating that “today’s warfare has to be fought with tomorrow’s technology.”
Speaking at a workshop on the indigenisation of Unmanned
Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and Counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (C-UAS) at the
Manekshaw Centre, the CDS highlighted the strategic importance of developing
homegrown drone technologies. He cautioned that relying on foreign technologies
not only weakens India’s defence preparedness but also compromises operational
surprise.
“Recent global conflicts have shown how drones can
disproportionately shift tactical balance,” General Chauhan said. “Asymmetric
drone warfare is making large platforms vulnerable, forcing militaries to
rethink their doctrines and develop adaptive responses.”
Referencing Operation Sindoor, India’s counter-offensive
following the Pahalgam terror attack, he noted that while Pakistan deployed
loiter munitions and unarmed drones on 10 May, none caused damage. “Most were
neutralised through kinetic and non-kinetic means, and some were recovered
nearly intact,” he said, underlining the growing effectiveness of India's C-UAS
capabilities.
He stressed that Operation Sindoor demonstrated the
necessity of having systems “built for our terrain and needs”. Imported niche
technologies, he said, limit scalability, reduce availability of critical
spares, and make Indian tactics predictable to adversaries.
Gen Chauhan cautioned that foreign weapons, sensors and
their capabilities are known to all, and adversaries can "predict our tactics
and doctrinal concepts" based on the capabilities of these systems.
“If developed indigenously, we maintain operational
surprise, at least in initial encounters,” he added.
In his message to the workshop, General Chauhan called
self-reliance in UAV and C-UAS technologies a “strategic imperative” that
empowers India to safeguard its interests and shape its own future.
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