How could India hit 13 targets including 8 air bases so precisely inside various strategic locations in Pakistan so precisely? How did Pakistan failed so miserably? These questions have rattled the experts across the world. On the intervening night of 9th & 10th May, when Paksitan unleashed its deadliest attack against Indian military & civilian areas with missiles and drones, they were challenged by the impenetrable, the iron dome, the Indian wall of Self Defence – Akashteer.
It was Akashteer, which stopped all Pakistani inbound airborne drones, missiles, other micro UAVs and other loitering munitions and prevented them from entering the Indian airspace. Akashteer is probably the first operational AI war-cloud built entirely without any foreign components or satellite dependencies. Comapred to Akashteer, Pakistan’s air defence response consisted of HQ- 9 & HQ-16 proved out to be a failure to detect our projectiles & interecpet them timely, resulting in heavy losses. ‘Akashteer’, the fully AI-powered autonomous defence system successfully did the real-time target interception and indulged in drone warfare.
Akashteer provides a common, real-time air picture to all involved parties (control room, radars, and Air Defense Guns), enabling coordinated air defense operations. It is a system designed to automate detection, tracking and engagement of enemy aircraft, drones and missiles. It integrates various radar systems, sensors and communication technologies into a single operational framework. Akashteer gathers data from multiple sources, processes it and allows for automated, real-time engagement decisions. Akashteer is part of the broader C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) framework, working in coordination with other systems like ISRO satellites and NAVIC GPS.
Akashteer’s brilliance lies not in brute force but in intelligent warfare. Traditional models of air defence rely heavily on ground-based radars, human-monitored systems, and surface-to-air missile batteries triggered by command chains. Akashteer breaks that mould. Its technology allows for monitoring of low level airspace in battle areas and efficient control of Ground Based Air Defence Weapon Systems. Akashteer is capable of intercepting and neutralising hostile UAVs without detection, using no active radar signatures. It relied entirely on stealth drone tracking, satellite surveillance, and AI-based decision-making.
Akashteer adds a new chapter to our strategic doctrine indicating a shift from defensive posturing to proactive retaliation against terror threats. Prime Minister had made it clear that India cannot be blackmailed by nuclear Pakistan and, if need be, we will retaliate to root out terrorism from inside their territory. Akashteer’s presence in our military assets exudes confidence that it gives a clear edge over terror sponsoring state Pakistan’s air defence capabilities.
Experts across the world are now terming Akasteer as “a seismic shift in warfare strategy”. With this, India has emerged as the first non-Western nation to successfully integrate its autonomous drone swarms, indigenous satellite surveillance, and AI battlefield coordination into a single, real-time combat platform- Akashteer. In one line, Akashteer has demonstrated that it sees, decides, and strikes faster than anything the world has fielded. Unlike conventional systems, Akashteer functions autonomously, with drones capable of altering flight paths, selecting targets, and coordinating strikes without operator input. The system is vehicle-based which makes it mobile and easier to handle in hostile environment. The integration of multiple elements reduces the possibility of friendly fire, enabling quick engagement of hostile targets, and guarantee friendly aircraft safety in contested airspace. The sensors integrated include 3D Tactical Radars, Low-Level Lightweight Radars, and the Akash Weapon System.
The most disruptive element of Akashteer is its combat AI. It absorbs data from multiple feeds—weather, terrain, radar intercepts—and makes real-time decisions, reroutes missions, and executes attacks autonomously, beating even NATO’s current battlefield AI loops. Reports indicate that during last Sunday night enagaements, the drone attack coordinated by Akashteer entered sensitive command zones undetected, leaving Pakistan’s US-supplied AWACS and ground radar systems paralysed. “This is beyond anything we’ve seen before”, said many Pakistani defence experts, which is equivocally echoed by many across the globe. Akashteer gives seamless and unified air picture to the lowest operational units of the Army Air Defence (AD), which enhances coordination and situational awareness across the force. Akashteer also increases automation and efficiency by eliminating human inputs and decentralising.