War has always been fought with courage. Today it is increasingly fought with control over technology.
And control rarely comes from outside.
The unfolding confrontation in the Middle East between Israel, the United States, and Iran offers us a stark reminder. Modern warfare is not only about missiles, drones, or aircraft. In fact, it is about who owns ‘behind the battle space’ tech hardware & software like microchips, navigation systems, guidance algorithms, satellite networks, and the invisible digital backbone powering kill chains that is powering the discourse.
The question, therefore, that naturally arises is, “What happens if those systems are denied?
This question now sits at the heart of defence indigenisation and strategic autonomy today.
When Sun Tzu wrote centuries ago that “the line between disorder and order lies in logistics,” he wasn’t clairvoyant, to say the least, as in the 21st-century battlefield today, logistics has expanded far beyond fuel and ammunition, as it now includes semiconductors, software updates, satellite signals, encryption protocols, and supply chains that stretch across continents.
And that is here, where modern conflicts are revealing their harsh lessons.
The ongoing tensions involving Israel, the United States, and Iran have demonstrated how geopolitics and technology supply chains are tightly interlinked. Nations that fall outside the strategic comfort zone of dominant powers often find themselves facing sanctions, export controls, and technological embargoes. Iran, for instance, has lived under varying layers of sanctions for decades. What followed was a forced but determined push toward indigenous capabilities in missiles, drones, and asymmetric technologies.
One may debate the politics. But the strategic lesson is unmistakable.
Nations under technological denial regimes innovate out of necessity.
Iran’s development of indigenous drone and missile systems, despite prolonged sanctions, is a case study in strategic compulsion. Israel, on the other hand, represents another model. It is a nation that invested deeply in domestic defence innovation from the early decades of its existence. Today, it operates one of the most sophisticated defence technology ecosystems in the world, ranging from missile defence systems like Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow missiles to advanced electronic warfare and cyber capabilities.
Two very different geopolitical circumstances.
Yet the same underlying principle in that control over defence technology ensures strategic freedom of action.
Carl von Clausewitz famously observed that “war is the continuation of politics by other means.” In the present era, one might as well add a corollary to it—”Technology is the continuation of sovereignty by other means.”
For India, this reality has long been acknowledged but unevenly pursued.
For decades, India’s defence preparedness of critical systems leaned heavily on imports. Fighter aircraft, artillery systems, air defence platforms, submarines, etc., were sourced externally. While these acquisitions strengthened immediate operational capability, they also created layers of dependency within supply chains, maintenance cycles and technology upgrades.
Any dependency in defence carries inherent risks in both geopolitical and technology supply chains.
A crisis rarely announces itself politely. It arrives suddenly, compressing decision timelines and testing national resilience. At such moments, the reliability of foreign suppliers becomes uncertain. Political calculations shift. Export approvals slow down. Software updates and technical support may be delayed.
The Russia–Ukraine conflict offered a recent illustration of this vulnerability. Sanctions, financial restrictions, and supply chain disruptions have reshaped global defence procurement patterns. Nations heavily dependent on imported equipment suddenly faced operational challenges related to maintenance, upgrades, and sustainment.
The Middle East tensions reinforce the same lesson yet again.
Modern precision warfare relies on an intricate architecture of sensors, satellites, artificial intelligence, real-time data processing, and guided munitions. These systems depend on technological components often controlled by a handful of advanced industrial economies. Export restrictions, licensing frameworks and technology denial regimes can quickly alter access.
In simple terms, sovereignty today is increasingly technological. This is where strategic autonomy begins to shrink.
India has recognised this shift and initiated several structural reforms in recent years. The push for Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing, the creation of positive indigenisation lists, increased participation of private industry, defence corridors, and the strengthening of indigenous R&D are steps moving in the right direction.
Yet the journey remains long and arduous.
Defence indigenisation cannot be reduced to assembling imported components within national borders. True technological sovereignty demands mastery across the entire value chain from design, material, microelectronics, and propulsion systems to software architecture, artificial intelligence, and advanced manufacturing.
It also requires deep collaboration between the armed forces, academia, private industry, MSMEs and research institutions.
The Indian Armed Forces themselves are gradually transitioning from being merely end users of imported equipment to becoming active stakeholders in indigenous development. Operational feedback, joint testing environment, and doctrinal integration will play a critical role in accelerating this transformation.
Another important dimension is speed.
Technological cycles in warfare are shrinking rapidly. Artificial intelligence driven decision systems, autonomous drones, electronic warfare platforms, and cyber capabilities are evolving at extraordinary pace. Defence innovation hubs must therefore move beyond traditional bureaucratic procurement cycles and embrace agile development models.
Start-ups, deep-tech innovators, and defence technology entrepreneurs are emerging as key contributors to an ever-expanding environment.
In many ways, the future battlefield may resemble a technology laboratory as much as a conventional theatre of war.
The Middle East conflict now illustrates another subtle but significant reality.
Strategic partnerships are important. Alliances matter. Diplomatic relationships shape the global balance of power. Yet even the closest partnerships cannot fully substitute for indigenous capability when national security interests are at stake.
Every nation ultimately prioritises its own strategic calculus.
India’s vision of strategic autonomy has always been rooted in maintaining freedom of decision-making in a complex geopolitical environment. Defence indigenisation is therefore not merely an industrial policy objective. It is a national security imperative.
Precision sovereignty with the ability to design, build, and sustain advanced military systems domestically will increasingly define geopolitical influence in the coming decades.
The battles of the future may well be fought by algorithms guiding autonomous systems, satellites feeding real-time intelligence, and precision weapons operating across domains. But the deeper contest will revolve around something less visible.
Control over technology.
Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw once remarked, “Professional knowledge and professional competence are the foundation of military efficiency.” In the emerging strategic landscape, that competence must extend beyond tactics and operations into technology, innovation, and industrial capability.
The lesson is becoming clearer with every conflict that unfolds across the world.
A nation that cannot build its own weapons may one day find itself unable to use them.
For India, the path forward is evident. It needs to accelerate defence innovation, deepen indigenous manufacturing, nurture technological hubs, and align strategic policy with industrial capacity.
Afterall in the new geometry of power, sovereignty is measured not only in territory or troop strength.
It is measured in technology.
And precision sovereignty will define who truly holds strategic freedom in the decades ahead.











