India Sees Defence Export Boom After Armed Forces Pounded Pakistan During Operation Sindoor

India is betting that its combat performance in May’s four-day flare-up with Pakistan will accelerate its transformation from one of the world’s biggest arms importers into a credible global exporter of advanced weapon systems.
The clashes – the deadliest since the 1999 Kargil War – left over 70 dead and witnessed the exchange of drones, artillery and long-range missiles across the Line of Control. For New Delhi, the battles doubled as a live showcase of homegrown capabilities.
Among the systems deployed were the indigenous “Invisible Shield” missile defence network and the AI-powered Akashteer vehicle-mounted system, which successfully intercepted volleys of drones and missiles. India also launched BrahMos cruise missiles at Pakistani bases, drawing global attention to one of its flagship weapons.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh described the operations as proof of “a new vision of warfare,” highlighting technology, self-reliance, and operational readiness. Military officials acknowledged that the conflict provided “golden insights” into system performance under real combat conditions, with lessons already being fed back into industry upgrades.
Combat-Proven Systems Drive Export Interest
The high-profile use of BrahMos has reportedly generated fresh inquiries from 14–15 countries, following its earlier export success with the Philippines. Analysts say the conflict served as a “market demonstrator”, proving that India’s systems are not just prototypes but battle-tested solutions.
India’s defence exports surged to US$2.8 billion in 2024–25, 34 times higher than a decade ago, while domestic production nearly doubled in five years to US$18 billion. Today, India supplies defence equipment to over 100 nations, with the US, France, and Armenia among key buyers.
Balancing Partnerships While Targeting Self-Reliance
Despite the export boom, New Delhi continues to juggle complex partnerships. It is deepening technology ties with the US, France, and Israel, while sustaining long-standing defence cooperation with Russia. At the same time, it faces China’s growing presence as Pakistan’s primary defence partner, intensifying the urgency for indigenous innovation.
Flagship initiatives like the “Sudarshan Chakra” missile shield—India’s answer to Israel’s Iron Dome—along with indigenous fighter jet engines, hypersonic missiles, and advanced drones, aim to solidify India’s long-term defence autonomy. The country’s drone sector alone is projected to reach US$11 billion by 2030, though 39% of critical small drone components still depend on China.
Structured Capability and Export Prospects
Phase | Timeline | Key Capabilities | Drivers & Events | Export Readiness |
---|---|---|---|---|
Importer Era | 1990s – early 2010s | Heavy reliance on Russian platforms (Su-30MKI, T-90, S-300, Igla) | Kargil War exposed gaps; ~70% imports from Russia | No exports; India seen as top arms buyer |
Integrator Phase | 2010s – early 2020s | Licensed production (Su-30, T-90S, Akash SAM); BrahMos co-developed | “Make in India” (2014) spurred tech tie-ups with US, Israel, France | Limited exports (radars, coastal systems) |
Indigenous Maturation | 2020–2024 | Tejas Mk1A, upgraded Akash SAM, Arjun MBT, drone prototypes | Record defence output: $18 bn; exports $2.8 bn to 100+ nations | Entry into SE Asia, Middle East, East Europe |
Combat-Proven Showcase | May 2025 Conflict | Akashteer AI AD, “Invisible Shield”, BrahMos strikes, drone warfare | Four-day clash acted as “market demonstrator” | Surge in foreign interest; 15 countries eye BrahMos, layered AD systems |
Future Export Hub | 2025–2035 (Projected) | Sudarshan Chakra, jet engines, hypersonic Rudram, AMCA stealth fighter, loitering drones | Push for autonomy; balancing US–Russia; reducing Chinese dependency | Targeting top-10 global exporter status; $11 bn drone market by 2030 |
Strategic Takeaway
The May conflict has handed New Delhi an unexpected export pitch: weapons not just on paper or in expos, but combat-proven under live-fire conditions. This “market demonstrator effect” could carry long-term strategic and commercial weight, positioning India as an increasingly confident supplier with battlefield credibility in the global arms market.
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