December 29, 2025
DAC Clears Rs 79,000 Crore Defence Proposals in Major Capability Push

DAC Clears Rs 79,000 Crore Defence Proposals in Major Capability Push

New Delhi [India], December 29:  When the Defence Acquisition Council cleared proposals worth nearly Rs 79,000 crore, it quietly reset the tempo of India’s military modernisation.

The Defence Acquisition Council, chaired by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, has accorded Acceptance of Necessity for a sweeping set of procurements across the Indian Army, Navy and Air Force. The approvals came during the DAC meeting on December 29, 2025. On paper, it’s a number. In reality, it’s a direction.

Rs 79,000 crore is not pocket change. But more than the figure, it’s the selection that matters. Drones. Precision rockets. Long-range missiles. Radars that spot what the naked eye never will. Systems meant for how wars actually unfold now, not how they looked a decade ago.

DAC Clears Rs 79,000 Crore Defence Proposals: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh - PNN

Indian Army: Seeing First, Striking Cleaner

The Army’s approvals read like a checklist of modern battlefield priorities. Start with Loiter Munition Systems for Artillery Regiments. These are not dumb rounds fired and forgotten. They hang, they watch, they wait. Then they strike tactical targets with precision. That pause, that ability to choose, changes outcomes.

Low-Level Light-Weight Radars are next. Their job is simple, though the tech isn’t. Detect and track small, low-flying unmanned aerial systems. In other words, spot hostile drones before they do damage. Given how cheap drones have become and how expensive their impact can be, this is overdue.

Then there’s the Long Range Guided Rocket Ammunition for the Pinaka Multiple Launch Rocket System. Pinaka already packs a punch. These guided rockets extend its reach and tighten its accuracy, allowing engagement of high-value targets from farther away. Distance, in warfare, buys time. Time buys options.

The Integrated Drone Detection and Interdiction System Mk-II rounds out the Army list. With enhanced range, it is designed to protect vital assets not just in Tactical Battle Areas but also deeper in the hinterland. That detail matters. Threats don’t politely stop at the front line anymore.

Put together, the Army’s acquisitions lean heavily toward awareness and precision. Less guesswork. Fewer blind spots. More control.

Indian Navy: Quiet Strength, Wide Eyes

Naval approvals often get less attention. They shouldn’t. This round begins with Bollard Pull Tugs. Not glamorous, yes. Essential, absolutely. These tugs assist ships and submarines during berthing, unberthing and manoeuvring in confined waters and harbours. As fleet size grows, harbour efficiency becomes a strategic asset.

High-frequency software-defined radios in manpack form are also cleared. These enhance long-range secure communication during boarding and landing operations. It’s the kind of capability you only miss when it fails. The Navy clearly doesn’t plan on missing it.

The standout, though, is the leasing of High Altitude Long Range Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems. HALE RPAS platforms mean persistent Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance. They also mean credible Maritime Domain Awareness across the Indian Ocean Region.

That ocean is not empty anymore. Persistent eyes in the sky change the equation. Quietly. Constantly.

Indian Air Force: Reach Further, Train Smarter

For the Indian Air Force, the DAC approvals focus on three things that pilots care about deeply. Safety. Range. Readiness.

The Automatic Take-off Landing Recording System is one of those unflashy systems that ends up doing heavy lifting. High-definition, all-weather recording of take-offs and landings fills gaps in the aerospace safety environment. It helps analyse, learn and prevent. That alone justifies its place.

Astra Mk-II missiles bring the edge back to air combat. With enhanced range, these missiles allow fighter aircraft to neutralise adversary aircraft from large standoff distances. In aerial warfare, distance is leverage. Astra Mk-II adds more of it.

Training gets a solid upgrade through the Full Mission Simulator for the Light Combat Aircraft Tejas. Simulators allow pilots to rehearse scenarios repeatedly, safely and cheaply. For a growing fleet, this is not optional. It’s foundational.

Then there’s SPICE-1000 Long Range Guidance Kits. These kits enhance precision strike capability from long distances. Again, the theme repeats. Hit accurately. Stay safer.

Why This Clearance Matters?

There’s a temptation to treat DAC approvals as bureaucratic milestones. That misses the point. These clearances reflect a shift in mindset. From reactive to anticipatory. From volume to precision.

India’s security environment is layered. Mountains, oceans, airspace, and now cyberspace hovering over all of it. The systems cleared here acknowledge that complexity without pretending there’s a silver bullet.

There’s also a broader signal. Capability development is being treated as continuous, not episodic. That alone is progress.

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