In the language of large institutions, transformation is a word that gets used often and delivered rarely. General Upendra Dwivedi, who retires as Chief of Army Staff on June 30, 2026, is one of the exceptions. The informal title his peers have given him — the Drone General — is not ceremonial. It is a precise description of what happened to the Indian Army during his watch, and why it matters beyond the numbers.
The numbers, however, are where the story begins. When General Dwivedi took charge, the Army’s drone inventory stood at a few hundred. It now exceeds 50,000, with projections pointing to a further doubling within two to three years. More than 25 Drone and Counter-Drone Hubs have been established across military stations — not pilot projects, but permanent infrastructure built to train soldiers, induct systems and sustain operations at scale. Precision engagement architectures have been extended to ranges approaching 500 kilometres, fundamentally altering the operational calculus along both the northern and western borders.
What distinguishes this from ordinary procurement is what accompanied it. New formations — Bhairav Battalions, Ashni Platoons, Rudra All Arms Brigades, Shaktibaan Regiments and Divyastra Batteries — were created not to absorb new equipment into old structures but to fight in ways the old structures were not designed for. The shift was from platform-centric to capability-centric warfare, from single-domain thinking to multi-domain operations. Nearly 25 doctrines, strategic guidelines and policy documents were issued to give the structural change its intellectual direction.
The operational validation arrived with Operation Sindoor. The coordinated use of drones, loitering munitions, electronic warfare and real-time intelligence fusion in a live campaign answered the question that no exercise can settle: does it work when it has to? Within strategic circles, the operation is now routinely described as a template for India’s future way of war — an assessment that carries weight precisely because it emerged from operational performance rather than institutional ambition.
Along the northern borders, Eastern Ladakh was developed as a live laboratory for technological adaptation — surveillance grids expanded, logistics networks deepened, rapid mobilisation capabilities stress-tested in terrain that tolerates neither error nor delay. Military planners now speak openly of future conflicts beginning in the drone and cyber domains well before conventional forces are committed.
Self-reliance was pursued as an operational necessity rather than a political aspiration. Partnerships with DRDO, private industry, MSMEs and start-ups accelerated indigenous drone and counter-drone development. Nearly all special clothing requirements and a substantial share of ammunition are now sourced domestically — a structural change that reduces the supply-chain vulnerability which, as recent conflicts elsewhere have demonstrated, can be as decisive as any battlefield factor.
General Dwivedi also elevated military diplomacy to an unprecedented level of ambition. The UNTCC Chiefs Conclave brought together representatives from 32 nations. The “Friends for Life” platform connected nearly 100,000 alumni of Indian military training institutions worldwide. Nearly 100 dual-use infrastructure projects were launched with various ministries, improving military readiness and civilian connectivity together.
The Drone General retires having changed what the Army possesses, how it is organised, what it believes about technology and, perhaps most consequentially, what it expects of itself going forward. That last change — institutional appetite for adaptation — is the one no inventory count can capture and the one his successors will most need to preserve.