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Military drones | Raising an Indian swarm

The conflict in Iran shows the efficacy of inexpensive drones in overwhelming sophisticated air defence systems and drawing them into expensive duels. Taking note, India is pushing for the indigenous production of low-cost, high-impact drones

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(Illustration by Nilanjan Das / AI)

Across all military platforms being used in the Iran conflict—a war of missile, bomb and drone strikes, counterstrikes and air defence—one of the clear winners is the humble, cheap UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle). Systems like Iran’s Shahed-136 have shown how low-cost, mass-produced drones can penetrate even the most sophisticated air defence networks. Flying low and deployed in swarms or waves, such drones force defenders to use interceptor missiles that cost millions of dollars to shoot down UAVs worth a fraction of that amount. For example, a Shahed-136 kamikaze drone costs between $20,000 (Rs 18.8 lakhs) - $50,000 (Rs 47 lakhs), but each US Patriot missile interceptor costs around $4 million (Rs 37.6 crore). Many are neutralised, but the significant numbers that pierce missile defence shields are causing havoc. Crucially, they use pre-programmed navigation, with minimal reliance on real-time communication, making them more resilient in the face of sophisticated Electronic Warfare (EW) tools.

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