Pakistan Alarmed As India Doubles Down On France's Rafale With Biggest Fighter Jet Deal Ever

| May 26, 2026, 12:20:03 AM | TOI.in
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India is preparing for one of the biggest fighter jet deals in modern military history — 114 Rafale fighter jets from France, with around 90 expected to be built locally under a massive Make In India defence push. The move comes after the Rafale became the face of Operation Sindoor, where India used SCALP missiles and HAMMER bombs to strike terror targets inside Pakistan and PoK with pinpoint precision. Pakistan is now watching closely as India rapidly expands its air power capabilities. Islamabad is simultaneously negotiating more Chinese J-10CE fighter jets in an attempt to counter India’s growing Rafale fleet. But this story is bigger than aircraft numbers. It is about technology transfer, indigenous defence manufacturing, air superiority and India’s long-term military strategy against both Pakistan and China. From Dassault to Tata, from Sindoor to strategic deterrence, this report breaks down why the Rafale expansion is changing South Asia’s geopolitical and military balance permanently.

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What is Kaal Bhairava? India’s AI combat drone and the Portugal defence deal explained

India’s indigenous AI-enabled combat aircraft Kaal Bhairava is set to enter the European manufacturing ecosystem after Indian defence startup Flying Wedge Defence and Aerospace partnered with Portugal-based defence-tech firm SKETCHPIXEL. The development marks a significant moment in India’s ambitions to emerge as a global defence exporter and integrate into advanced Western military networks.Unlike disposable loitering munitions, Kaal Bhairava is designed as a Medium Altitude Long Endurance (MALE) autonomous combat aircraft capable of long-range surveillance, precision strike missions and AI-assisted battlefield operations. With a reported endurance of over 30 hours and a range of nearly 3,000 kilometres, the platform reflects the growing global shift toward autonomous and AI-driven warfare systems.The Portugal partnership is strategically important because it potentially opens pathways into Nato-linked defence ecosystems, interoperability standards and European military integration networks. While Flying Wedge retains ownership of the drone’s core intellectual property and autonomous systems, SKETCHPIXEL is expected to contribute simulation technologies, encrypted communications, AI integration and battlefield interoperability support.The deal also highlights a broader transformation underway in global defence manufacturing, where military platforms are increasingly designed, assembled and integrated across multiple countries. For India, the partnership represents more than a drone export story. It signals a shift from being one of the world’s largest arms importers toward becoming a developer of globally deployable defence technologies.At the same time, the rise of AI-enabled combat systems has also intensified debates around autonomous warfare, battlefield ethics and the role of human oversight in lethal decision-making. As militaries across the world invest heavily in AI-powered unmanned systems, Kaal Bhairava is emerging at the intersection of technology, geopolitics and the future of warfare.

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