Syllabus: GS3/Defence
In News
- The Army Chief has unveiled a comprehensive three-phase roadmap to build a future-ready force by 2047, aligning military transformation with India’s vision of Viksit Bharat.
Comprehensive three-phase roadmap
- The plan emphasizes modernization, integration, and resilience to meet evolving security challenges.
- Phases: The first phase, ‘HOP 2032’, forms a comprehensive framework under the Army’s decade of transformation initiative launched in 2023.
- The second phase, ‘STEP 2037’, comprises a five-year period of consolidating the gains from the first phase.
- Third phase, ‘JUMP 2047’, under which the Army aims to emerge as an integrated, future-ready force.
| Do you know? – The Army Chief outlined four “springboards” to drive the transformation plan: 1. Self-reliance through indigenisation: Strengthening domestic defence manufacturing and technology absorption, with more progress needed. 2. Accelerated innovation: Moving from experimentation to large-scale impact in AI, cyber, quantum, autonomous systems, space, and advanced materials. 3. Adaptation and ecosystem reform: Reshaping structures and processes to meet evolving security needs. 4. Military-civil fusion: Building deep synergy between academia, industry, and the military, with initiatives like opening ranges, funding start-ups, and joining national technology missions. |
Objective and Need
- The roadmap stems from India’s changing security environment, marked by hybrid warfare, cyber threats, and regional instability.
- With the rise of disruptive technologies and contested borders, the Army is evolving beyond conventional warfare.
- The plan aligns with the government’s push for Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence, reducing reliance on imports and strengthening indigenous production.
Challenges
- India’s defence modernization faces key hurdles like resource constraints in balancing fiscal discipline with high costs,
- Technology gaps due to limited domestic production of advanced systems
- Operational complexity in integrating new doctrines while staying combat-ready
- Human capital challenges in training personnel for emerging domains like cyber, space, and electronic warfare.
Way Ahead
- The Army chief outlined a long-term transformation plan for India’s Army, focusing on structural reforms, stronger civil-military-industrial partnerships, and sustained R&D investment.
- The goal is to build a future-ready, resilient force by 2047 that can safeguard sovereignty and support India’s rise as a global power, while modernizing and indigenizing capabilities despite fiscal and technological challenges.
Source :TH
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