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This Week in AsiaPolitics

India’s arms sector eyes pivotal breakthrough with UAE: ‘confidence booster’

A UAE order for BrahMos missiles would ‘validate Indian weapons in a highly competitive market’, analysts say

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Indian-Russian BrahMos cruise missiles are on display at the International Maritime Defence Show Fleet 2026 in Kronstadt, outside St Petersburg, Russia, on June 10. Photo: EPA
Biman Mukherji
A potential sale of BrahMos missiles to the United Arab Emirates could mark a significant step in India’s push to become a serious arms exporter, giving New Delhi a foothold in one of the world’s most competitive security markets, analysts have said.

The talks also include the potential sale of Akashteer, India’s automated air-defence command-and-control system, according to a Reuters report from June 22.

No deal has been signed and discussions remain in the early stages, but analysts say a UAE order would carry symbolic and strategic weight for India as it tries to shift from being one of the world’s biggest arms buyers to a more serious exporter of weapons and defence equipment.

BrahMos, jointly developed by India and Russia, is a supersonic precision cruise missile that can launch from land, sea and air and travel up to three times the speed of sound, or Mach 3.

“For India, this is a big confidence booster. It accelerates the shift from being a top arms buyer to a growing exporter, strengthens ties with a key Gulf partner [beyond just oil and trade] and shows the world that Indian systems are combat-proven and worth buying,” A.B. Shivane, a former lieutenant general in the Indian army, told This Week in Asia.

Shivane said the UAE appeared interested in a wider basket of Indian equipment, including Akash surface-to-air missiles for layered defence, Pinaka rocket systems and associated ammunition, precision-guided munitions and drones or unmanned aerial vehicles, possibly for naval or coastal defence.

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