Context
- Defence Forces Vision 2047, articulated by the Defence Minister, outlines India’s roadmap to build technologically advanced, integrated, multi-domain armed forces, aligning military transformation with the goal of Viksit Bharat by 2047.
- The vision emerges amid changing nature of warfare—prolonged, technology-driven, and industrial-scale conflicts—as seen in Ukraine, West Asia, and Nagorno-Karabakh, necessitating structural transformation of defence ecosystem.
Relevance
- GS Paper II: Governance (defence reforms, institutional integration), IR (defence partnerships)
- GS Paper III: Security (military modernisation, emerging warfare), Economy (defence industry), S&T (AI, drones, cyber)
Practice Question
Q.“Defence Forces Vision 2047 marks a shift from military modernisation to comprehensive national power strategy.” Analyse. (250 words)
Core Vision & Pillars
- The strategy envisages armed forces that are technologically advanced, fully integrated across services, and capable of multi-domain operations including cyber, space, underwater, and electronic warfare domains.
- It expands beyond military capability to include industrial capacity, technological ecosystems, and economic strength, recognising that national power in the 21st century is multidimensional.
Evolution of Defence Reforms
- The vision builds on earlier reforms such as Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020, creation of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), push for theatre commands, and defence industrial corridors.
- Emphasis on Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing and increased private sector participation marks a shift from import dependence to domestic capability building.
Strategic Rationale
- Modern conflicts are protracted, technology-intensive, and industrially sustained, requiring not just precision but mass production of weapons, drones, and electronic systems.
- Emphasis on cybersecurity, data networks, and information warfare highlights the growing importance of non-kinetic domains in determining conflict outcomes.
Economic & Industrial Dimension
- Defence Vision 2047 integrates security with economic growth, promoting a defence-industrial ecosystem that generates jobs, innovation, and exports.
- The defence budget (~₹7.85 lakh crore) reflects prioritisation of military modernisation and recognition that industrial base underpins military capability.
Self-Reliance vs Import Dependence
- Despite policy push, India remains the world’s second-largest arms importer, accounting for ~8.2% of global imports (SIPRI 2026), indicating structural dependency.
- Challenges arise from legacy procurement patterns, long gestation periods, and gaps in high-end manufacturing capabilities such as aerospace and advanced electronics.
Technology & R&D Dimension
- India’s defence R&D spending remains low at around $2.8 billion (~3.35% of defence budget) compared to China (~$44.4 billion, ~15%), indicating a significant capability gap.
- Overall R&D expenditure <0.7% of GDP is far below major powers, necessitating stronger innovation ecosystems and academia–industry–military collaboration.
Global Partnerships & Diplomacy
- India is diversifying defence cooperation beyond traditional partners like USA, France, Russia, Israel, to include Australia, Japan, Brazil, Indonesia, Gulf countries, for co-production and exports.
- Strategic partnerships and technology transfers are essential to accelerate domestic capability while integrating into global defence supply chains.
Defence Exports & MSME Ecosystem
- Expanding defence exports requires diplomatic outreach, defence exhibitions, and global marketing, particularly targeting Global South countries seeking affordable and reliable defence partners.
- MSMEs form the backbone of defence supply chains but require predictable demand, financing, and export opportunities to scale up effectively.
Emerging Technologies Focus
- Increasing focus on drones, artificial intelligence, geospatial systems, and electronic warfare reflects adaptation to future warfare trends where unmanned systems act as force multipliers.
- Collaborations like General Atomics–L&T drone manufacturing highlight growing public-private and international industrial partnerships.
Maritime & Indo-Pacific Dimension
- With the Indo-Pacific emerging as a strategic hotspot, India must strengthen naval capabilities, underwater warfare, and maritime surveillance to secure sea lanes of communication (SLOCs).
- The Indian Ocean Region (IOR) is central to India’s strategic interests, requiring sustained focus on maritime infrastructure and naval modernisation.
Institutional Integration
- Push towards theatre commands and joint operational planning reflects the need for integrated military operations across land, air, sea, cyber, and space domains.
- Enhancing jointness and interoperability is critical for efficient resource utilisation and effective response in multi-domain conflicts.
Challenges
- Persistent import dependence and limited domestic capabilities in high-end technologies hinder full realisation of Atmanirbharta in defence.
- Low R&D investment, bureaucratic delays, and lack of policy stability constrain innovation and industrial growth in defence sector.
- Weak industry–academia collaboration and limited scaling of MSMEs affect supply chain resilience and technological advancement.
Way Forward
- Increase defence R&D spending and promote innovation ecosystems involving DRDO, academia, startups, and private sector for advanced technology development.
- Accelerate theatre command reforms, streamline procurement processes, and reduce bureaucratic bottlenecks to improve operational efficiency.
- Strengthen defence exports strategy, integrate MSMEs into global supply chains, and leverage strategic partnerships for co-development and co-production.
- Align defence manufacturing with industrial policy and skilling initiatives, ensuring sustainable growth of defence-industrial ecosystem.
Conclusion
- Defence Vision 2047 represents a shift from military modernisation to comprehensive national power strategy, integrating security, economy, and technology, crucial for India’s aspiration to emerge as a leading global power by 2047.


