Sunday, July 19, 2026

Strategic Evolution of India's Directed Energy Program: From Tactical Counter-UAS To High-Power Laser Anti-Satellite Capabilities


The shifting paradigm of contemporary warfare, characterised by weaponised low-cost unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and the militarisation of space, has forced a critical evaluation of traditional kinetic defence mechanisms.

The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), primarily through its apex facility, the Centre for High Energy Systems and Sciences (CHESS), has systematically pivoted toward indigenous Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs).

This analysis evaluates India's laser architecture, examining the technical progression from tactical 10-kilowatt (kW) and 30-kW systems to the strategic, multi-hundred kilowatt Directionally Unrestricted Ray-Gun Array (DURGA-II) project. Particular attention is devoted to the operational realities, structural constraints, and clean-kill potential of leveraging pulse lasers as Anti-Satellite (ASAT) weapons within India’s broader national security framework.

The operational vulnerability of space-based assets and the emergence of swarm drone manoeuvres have exposed severe economic and tactical limitations within traditional kinetic air-and-space defence frameworks. Throwing multi-million dollar surface-to-air missiles at low-cost commercial drones creates a severe cost-asymmetry that is financially unsustainable in prolonged conflicts.

Furthermore, the strategic landscape altered dramatically following India's landmark Mission Shakti in 2019, which validated a kinetic hit-to-kill ASAT capability. While highly successful as a technological deterrent, kinetic interception inherently creates thousands of high-velocity orbital trackable fragments, introducing the risk of the Kessler syndrome—a cascading cycle of satellite collisions rendering specific low-Earth orbits (LEO) unusable.

To mitigate international diplomatic blowback and safeguard the global space commons, the Indian Ministry of Defence’s official Technology Perspective & Capability Roadmaps (TPCR) explicitly prioritised DEWs alongside ASAT applications.

Directed energy systems present a revolutionary paradigm shift: near-zero cost-per-shot logistics, instantaneous speed-of-light engagement, and the critical ability to execute "clean" or "soft" kills against orbital and aerial platforms. By shifting the defence mechanism from kinetic impactors to focused photon absorption, India aims to develop an adaptable, escalatory deterrent capable of blinding or neutralising space-based assets without generating catastrophic orbital debris.

India’s laser deployment strategy operates along a distinct, two-phased maturation curve, balancing immediate tactical air defence requirements against future space warfare targets.

The developmental baseline transitioned into operational validation with a highly successful field demonstration of the land-based, vehicle-mounted Laser Directed Weapon MK-II(A) at the Kurnool National Open Air Range. Executed under the engineering direction of CHESS, this 30-kW class weapon achieved high-precision structural damage on fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles and intercepted simulated swarm drone formations.

The weapon employs an integrated suite of high-resolution radar and electro-optic (EO) tracking systems to continuously calculate threat vectors. Upon target acquisition, the focused beam deposits immense thermal energy on the target's exterior skin, inducing structural failure or immediately destroying internal guidance sensors.

Concurrently, the Indian Air Force has initiated procurement pathways for 10-kW variants of the MK-II(A) system, designed primarily for base defence to eliminate low-altitude reconnaissance threats up to a 2-kilometre engagement envelope.

To transition laser technology from local air defence to a viable strategic weapon, DRDO launched Project DURGA-II (Directionally Unrestricted Ray-Gun Array). Aimed initially at a 100-kW lightweight configuration, the project is designed to expand the engagement envelope to intercept faster, harder targets, including incoming cruise missiles, artillery shells, and ballistic re-entry vehicles.

However, the ultimate iteration of the DURGA architecture aims for a 300-kW class output. This power level represents the critical threshold required to burn through reinforced military casings at longer ranges, serving as the technological stepping stone for ground-based satellite neutralisers.

Unlike continuous-wave (CW) lasers, which deliver a steady stream of thermal energy like a blowtorch, anti-satellite weapon systems prefer high-power pulse lasers. The unique challenges of space-to-ground engagement make pulse technology essential.

Atmospheric distortion is the primary barrier for any ground-to-space laser. When a high-energy laser travels through the atmosphere, it heats the air molecules along its path. This creates a localized drop in air density that acts like a dispersing lens, spreading out the beam—a physical phenomenon known as thermal blooming.

Pulse lasers bypass this limitation by compressing massive amounts of energy into gigawatt- or terawatt-level bursts lasting only nanoseconds. The pulse passes through the air faster than the atmosphere can physically react or heat up, delivering a highly concentrated burst of photons directly onto the orbital target.

When this pulse hits a satellite traveling in low-Earth orbit, it causes rapid thermal expansion on the target's outer surface. This sudden expansion creates an explosive mechanical shockwave within the material, shattering interior electronics, cracking solar arrays, and rupturing fuel lines without needing to melt the entire chassis.

When deployed against assets in LEO, a pulse laser weapon operates across two distinct, scalable mission profiles depending on strategic needs. The most immediate operational capability of a long-range pulse laser is optical degradation. Satellites rely on sensitive focal plane arrays and electro-optical sensors to gather intelligence.

By directing a low-to-medium power pulse laser at an overflying reconnaissance satellite, a ground station can flood its sensors with photons. This "dazzles" the satellite, temporarily whiting out its surveillance cameras as it passes over sensitive territory.

If the laser intensity is dialled up slightly, it crosses the threshold into permanent blinding. The focused energy burns out the satellite's charge-coupled devices (CCDs) or complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) sensors, permanently disabling its spy capabilities while leaving the physical satellite body intact.

At maximum power settings, a ground-based or high-altitude pulse laser can attempt a hard kill. Achieving a hard kill through hundreds of kilometres of atmosphere requires advanced adaptive optics—mirrors that constantly alter their shape thousands of times per second to cancel out atmospheric turbulence in real-time.

Once the beam is stabilized, the laser targets vulnerable points on the satellite, such as the delicate attitude control thrusters or the communication antennas. By damaging these specific components, the laser renders the satellite unguided and unresponsive, effectively neutralising the asset while ensuring it naturally deorbits over time due to atmospheric drag.

Despite successful field tests of the 30-kW systems, scaling up to an operational laser ASAT weapon presents immense engineering hurdles that DRDO must solve over the coming decade.

Power Supply and Storage: A laser capable of reaching LEO requires megawatt-level energy inputs. Tactical systems can rely on vehicle engines or compact generators, but a strategic system needs massive capacitor banks or dedicated electrical grids to store and release enormous amounts of electricity instantly.

Thermal Management: Solid-state and fibre lasers are highly inefficient, converting only about 30% to 40% of their electrical input into light energy. The remaining 60%+ is lost as waste heat. Without advanced liquid cooling systems to safely dissipate this heat, the laser will warp its own internal optics or suffer immediate thermal shutdown.

Size, Weight, and Power (SWaP) Constraints: As power requirements scale up, the size of the laser systems grows rapidly. DRDO faces the difficult task of ruggedizing these fragile, complex optical systems so they can operate reliably in mobile field environments rather than pristine laboratory settings.

Integrating National Defence Networks: For effective space operations, these laser systems cannot operate in isolation. They must be seamlessly integrated into India’s upcoming Mission Sudarshan Chakra, a national air defence network designed to link thousands of radar installations, tracking satellites, and weapon systems into a unified command structure.

Conclusion

India’s development of Directed Energy Weapons, led by DRDO’s CHESS facility, marks a major step forward in its national defence strategy. By validating tactical vehicle-mounted systems, India has laid the foundation for a scalable laser architecture.

While current deployments focus on the immediate threat of low-altitude drones and tactical surveillance sensors, the long-term goal remains clear: scaling these technologies into high-power pulse lasers for space defence.

If India successfully overcomes the challenges of power storage, thermal cooling, and adaptive optics, its laser program will provide a clean, precise, and debris-free alternative to traditional kinetic weapons, securing its status as a leading power in modern space security.

IDN (With Agency Inputs)



Shielding The Frontline: India's Breakthrough Indigenous Composite Armour Passes Crucial Army Trials For Enhanced Tank-Killer Survivability


The global landscape of modern warfare has shifted drastically with the introduction of low-cost drones, precision-guided weaponry, and loitering munitions. These innovations have altered combat dynamics, exposing vulnerabilities in heavy main battle tanks and armoured personnel carriers that previously controlled open battle zones, DD India reported.

Because first-person view (FPV) drones and sophisticated anti-tank guided missiles are becoming standard equipment, militaries around the world are urgently trying to improve the survival rate of their frontline heavy vehicles.

India has potentially answered this challenging problem with a breakthrough, entirely indigenous protective technology. Developed by a research team at Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, this highly specialized composite armour system has passed crucial rounds of field assessments by the Indian Army. It is now being actively considered for operational integration across multiple Indian combat vehicles.

Officially named the Maharana Pratap Singh Composite Armour, the system is designed to provide high-level defence without ruining vehicle agility. The project was led by Professor Dr. Shantanu Bhowmik from Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, who collaborated with Mumbai-based ACE Gas Conversions Pvt. Ltd.

Together, they spent nearly a decade studying advanced hybrid composites and protective materials to perfect the design.

The design specifically targets modern threats like drone-dropped payloads, improvised explosive devices (IEDs), intense battlefield shockwaves, and direct ballistic impacts.

Because it relies on a lightweight composite structure, it adds minimal dead weight compared to traditional steel plates. This allows vehicles to maintain their speed, acceleration, and fuel efficiency.

A major focus of the Indian Army's evaluation is using this material for overhead "cope cages." These structures, which look like metal frameworks or grids raised above a tank's main turret, act as a physical barrier. They detonate incoming top-attack projectiles or exploding FPV drones before they can strike the vehicle's thin top armour.

The potential of the material became clear during tactical reviews in 2025. Brigadier Subhankar Sengupta, operating within the Indian Army's Jhansi formation, championed testing the composite panels on top-attack drone defence shields. This concept proved that the material could easily integrate with existing military hardware.

The developmental path included rigorous safety validations overseen by the Ministry of Defence. Prominent among these were blast survivability trials conducted at the Terminal Ballistics Research Laboratory (TBRL) in Chandigarh. There, the material had to withstand high-pressure shockwaves and explosive fragments.

Earlier, in September 2023, the research team presented their progress at a high-level defence evaluation meeting at Amrita University's Coimbatore campus. This meeting included representatives from the Indian Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, and national security agencies. The project eventually earned official praise and backing from senior leaders, including National Security Adviser Ajit Doval.

Testing accelerated in January 2026 when Brigadier Sumit Rawat of the White Tiger Division organized field validation trials. The division used actual composite armour panels supplied by the university to test how the system handled real-world deployment pressures.

Recently, the 31 Armoured Division gave the system formal appreciation after testing it at the Babina Field Firing Ranges. During these exercises, a one-metre by one-metre plate weighing 110 kilograms faced a simulated battlefield blast. The test charge featured both high explosives and lethal splinter components.

Major General Mandeep Singh, General Officer Commanding of the 31 Armoured Division, confirmed that the plate successfully absorbed the impact. He noted that the material showed great potential for protecting military assets against IEDs and heavy blasts.

Beyond stopping explosives, the Maharana Pratap Singh Composite Armour provides versatile protection. The hybrid material stops small-arms fire from weapons like the AK-203 assault rifle and Light Machine Guns (LMGs). It also includes built-in soundproofing qualities and can be modified to protect military outposts, command centres, and strategic infrastructure.

Professor Bhowmik explained that naming the technology after Maharana Pratap was a deliberate choice to honour a legacy of battlefield reliability, resilience, and strength. The ongoing development program reflects a successful collaboration between Indian academia and private industry, providing a timely solution to modern tank-killer threats.

Agencies


Iranian Embassy In India Condemns US Strike On Chabahar Port As War Crime


The Iranian Embassy in India has strongly condemned the recent United States military strikes on Iran’s Shahid Kalantari Port in Chabahar, describing the attack as a “war crime.”

The Embassy accused Washington of deliberately targeting civilian and economic infrastructure, asserting that such actions constitute a violation of international law and the United Nations Charter.

In its statement, the Embassy emphasised that the United States has obligations under international law to protect civilian assets during armed conflict. It argued that by striking the Chabahar Port surveillance tower, the US demonstrated disregard for these obligations and further undermined global norms governing warfare.

The condemnation followed confirmation from US Central Command (CENTCOM) that its forces had destroyed the surveillance tower at Chabahar Port. CENTCOM stated that the facility was part of a maritime surveillance network operated by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to monitor commercial shipping in the Gulf of Oman and the Strait of Hormuz. According to CENTCOM, the strike was intended to weaken the IRGC’s ability to coordinate attacks on commercial vessels and to safeguard freedom of navigation in regional waters.

CENTCOM added that the operation was part of the ongoing US naval blockade against Iran. It claimed that the destruction of the tower directly degraded the IRGC’s capacity to target civilian crew members and reinforced efforts to protect maritime traffic, except for vessels attempting to breach the blockade.

Iran’s state news agency IRNA confirmed the destruction of the maritime control tower but reported that berths, cargo-handling equipment, and other operational infrastructure at Chabahar Port were not damaged. Port authorities immediately began safety inspections and initiated steps to restore normal operations.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs also responded to the developments. Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal clarified that the terminal itself had not suffered damage. He noted that the US waiver for India’s involvement in the Chabahar program had expired some time ago, and discussions were ongoing with stakeholders about the future of the project.

He reiterated that while reports of the strike were acknowledged, India’s operational terminal remained unaffected.

The incident has heightened tensions between Washington and Tehran, with Iran accusing the US of violating international law and deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure, while the US maintains that its actions are aimed at protecting global shipping routes and enforcing its blockade.

This episode underscores the growing volatility in the Gulf of Oman and the Strait of Hormuz, where the intersection of military operations, international law, and global trade continues to generate friction. 

The competing narratives from Tehran and Washington highlight the deepening divide over freedom of navigation, sovereignty, and the legitimacy of military actions in contested waters.

ANI


NATO’s Proxy War Against Russia Poses Strategic Challenges For India


The NATO summit held in Ankara from 7–8 July reaffirmed the alliance’s determination to continue its campaign against Russia in Ukraine. This outcome was expected, though critics argue that NATO has failed to learn from its past mistakes, including its relentless eastward expansion, its support for the 2014 coup in Kyiv, and the removal of President Viktor Yanukovich, wrote Vladimir Ladanov in the Daily Pioneer publication.

These actions, aimed at turning Ukraine into a Western stronghold against Russia, are seen as central to the current geopolitical crisis. NATO’s ambition to dominate Europe’s security space and its disregard for Russia’s vital interests have fuelled the bloodiest conflict on the continent since the Second World War.

Once described as “brain dead” by French President Emmanuel Macron in 2019, NATO has now found renewed purpose in its confrontation with Moscow, though questions remain about the sustainability of this unity.

The alliance’s original purpose was famously summarised by its first Secretary General, Hastings Ismay, as “to keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down.” Today, all three pillars of that dictum are being challenged. After the Cold War, US Undersecretary of Defence Paul Wolfowitz articulated a doctrine that sought to prevent Russia’s resurgence, ruling out meaningful integration with the West.

Yet Russia has re-emerged as a great power, countering the combined might of the Western coalition in Ukraine and resisting attempts at escalation dominance. NATO’s refusal to engage Moscow on equal terms is now seen as a squandered opportunity, leaving the alliance embroiled in a proxy war that undermines its original mission of ensuring Euro-Atlantic security.

NATO’s leadership now faces the risk of fragmentation. US President Donald Trump has signalled his desire to radically redistribute burden sharing, criticising European allies for freeloading at America’s expense.

He has even floated the possibility of suspending defence commitments to countries deemed underperforming or politically at odds with Washington, citing the precedent of ANZUS obligations to New Zealand being suspended in the 1980s.

Trump’s administration is reviewing America’s European force posture, with reductions in troop deployments likely. His broader strategy is to pivot towards the Pacific, freeing resources currently tied down in Europe and Ukraine.

More controversially, Trump favours negotiating directly with Russia to end the conflict, a prospect that alarms European leaders who rely heavily on US strategic assets such as intelligence, surveillance, precision strike capabilities, and nuclear deterrence. Without these, Europe’s position against Russia would weaken considerably.

The third pillar of NATO’s founding purpose—keeping Germany down—is also under strain. Germany’s defence spending has surged, doubling since 2022 and projected to reach nearly €160 billion by 2030, rivalling Britain and France combined.

This rearmament raises concerns about a redistribution of power in Europe and rekindles historical grievances, such as Poland’s demand for wartime reparations. While European elites currently welcome Germany’s military build-up as a counter to Russia, history warns of the risks of such strategies, recalling the disastrous miscalculations of the 1930s.

For India, two key observations emerge from this geopolitical drama. First, European states are poor security partners for India, as their resources are consumed by the confrontation with Russia. Their Indo-Pacific strategies, lacking funding and substance, offer little tangible support to New Delhi.

This mirrors Britain’s pre-WWII decision to prioritise European defence at the expense of Pacific deployments, a choice that weakened its global position.

Second, India’s foreign policy community broadly agrees that a strong, independent Russia is vital for maintaining a favourable balance of power in Eurasia. Europe’s pursuit of Russia’s defeat undermines this balance, complicating India’s strategic options and reducing its flexibility.

Against this backdrop, an early termination of the Ukraine conflict and a restoration of normalcy between Russia and the West would serve India’s interests. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s message that “today’s era is not the era of war” resonates strongly in this context, offering a pathway towards stability and balance.

For India, the resolution of the conflict is not merely a matter of global peace but a strategic necessity to safeguard its external environment and ensure that Eurasia remains conducive to its rise.

Agencies


China’s Unverified Military Grade Turbofan Engine Claims And India’s Struggle For Self‑Reliance


China has claimed a major breakthrough by fitting its J‑20 stealth fighters with indigenous WS‑15 engines, marking what it describes as a decisive step in reducing dependence on Russian propulsion.

The WS‑15 is said to be in serial production and powering frontline aircraft, a development that Beijing portrays as proof of its technological maturity. Yet, independent verification of these claims remains limited, and much of the information originates from Chinese state sources, which have historically exaggerated achievements for strategic signalling.

India, by contrast, continues to rely on imported engines. The TEJAS fleet uses US‑made GE F404 engines, while the TEJAS MK-2 and AMCA are expected to fly with GE F414s under licensed production.

The indigenous Kaveri program, launched in the mid‑1980s, has faced repeated delays and funding constraints. While progress has been made with a dry variant suitable for drones, India is still far from fielding a combat‑ready indigenous turbofan engine.

China’s aero‑engine journey began in the 1950s with Soviet assistance, later shifting to reverse‑engineering when technical data was withheld. By the 1980s, China’s capabilities lagged far behind Western standards, and the WS‑10 program launched in 1986 was plagued by failures.

Early WS‑10 engines suffered catastrophic reliability issues, sometimes failing after only a few dozen hours. The turning point came when Chinese engineers reportedly mastered mass production of single‑crystal turbine blades, a critical technology for high‑temperature endurance. Even then, the WS‑10A logged nearly 20,000 faults in its first three years, underscoring the scale of the challenge.

Incremental improvements led to the WS‑10B, which incorporated better alloys and components. By 2018, a J‑10C powered by the WS‑10B performed aerobatics at Zhuhai, signalling improved reliability. From 2019 onwards, WS‑10Bs began powering single‑engine fighters, though mean time between failures still lagged behind Russian and Western benchmarks.

China consolidated its aero‑engine sector in 2016 by forming the Aero Engine Corporation of China (AECC), pooling vast resources to compete with global leaders. The WS‑15, designed for super‑cruise capability in the J‑20, is now claimed to be in operational deployment, though external validation remains scarce.

India’s path has been more constrained. HAL initially produced engines under licence, gaining experience but not intellectual property. The GTX‑35VS Kaveri program, launched in 1986, faced severe metallurgical hurdles, particularly in producing turbine blades capable of withstanding 1,500°C. Sanctions after India’s 1998 nuclear tests further restricted access to advanced technology.

A breakthrough came in 2021 when the Defence Metallurgical Research Laboratory indigenously produced single‑crystal turbine blades, a milestone that demonstrated India’s ability to overcome critical bottlenecks. The Kaveri derivative engine is now being readied for drones, with companies like Godrej Aerospace delivering production‑standard units.


India has also pursued strategic partnerships. HAL and GE Aerospace signed a major technical transfer agreement for co‑production of F414 engines, while proposals from Rolls‑Royce and Safran for a 120 kN‑class engine with full technology transfer are under consideration. India’s approach now centres on joint ventures with full IP ownership, aiming to establish a domestic aero‑engine ecosystem by the early 2030s.

The divergence between the two nations lies in scale and consistency. China treated aero‑engine development as a national strategic priority, spending an estimated $42 billion since 1986, while India invested only around $239 million in the Kaveri program.

China accepted repeated failures, employed foreign engineers, and aggressively reverse‑engineered Russian designs, gradually building competence. India aimed too high too soon, sought immediate success, and suffered from fluctuating support and bureaucratic delays. China built robust supply chains and institutional focus, while India’s effort was fragmented across multiple agencies.

Ultimately, China’s claims of success with the WS‑15 remain largely unverified outside its own ecosystem. Independent assessments suggest persistent reliability gaps compared to Western engines, particularly in lifespan and performance consistency.

India’s military‑grade turbofan engine program has been far more transparent, with setbacks and failures openly reported in the national media, often sparking public debate and parliamentary scrutiny.

By contrast, China’s state‑controlled media tightly manages narratives around its aero‑engine achievements, presenting breakthroughs such as the WS‑10 and WS‑15 as unqualified successes while downplaying reliability issues and developmental failures. This openness in India highlights both the challenges of indigenous development and the accountability mechanisms of a democratic system, whereas China’s controlled messaging serves more as strategic signalling than verifiable technical disclosure.

India, though behind in fielding a combat‑ready indigenous engine, has achieved significant milestones in metallurgy and is laying the groundwork for future self‑reliance through joint ventures and technology transfers. The contrast highlights not only differences in funding and risk appetite but also the credibility gap in evaluating Chinese technological achievements.

IDN (With Agency Inputs)


PoK Protest Leader Calls Region Neither 'Azad' Nor 'Disputed' But ‘Occupied’ As Anti-Pakistan Uprising Deepens


Pakistan’s long-standing narrative on Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) has come under unprecedented internal challenge after a massive rally at Eidgah Ground in Rawalakot, where local movement leader Sardar Aman Khan publicly rejected Islamabad’s terminology of “Azad Kashmir” and even the notion of the area being a “disputed” territory, NDTV reported.

Speaking before an estimated 80,000-strong gathering, Khan declared that the region was neither “Azad” (free) nor “disputed” but an “occupied territory”, explicitly framing PoK as an area under Pakistani occupation rather than one awaiting final status under a bilateral or international process.

Addressing the crowd, he directly challenged Pakistan’s decades-old propaganda that has projected the region as “Azad Jammu and Kashmir” and claimed to represent the will of the local people.

In a pointed assertion, he told the rally, “This is not a disputed territory, this is an occupied territory, it has been occupied,” triggering loud applause and slogans from the assembled demonstrators who have been mobilised under the banner of the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC).

The Rawalakot rally, held at the Eidgah Ground, is described as one of the largest public gatherings in the recent history of PoK protests, signalling the scale of anger against Pakistan’s political, economic and administrative policies in the region.

Khan’s articulation directly undercuts Pakistan’s long-standing policy of calling the area “Azad Kashmir” and treating it as a symbol of its claimed support for Kashmiri self-determination, by instead casting Islamabad as an occupying power dependent on the territory’s resources and geography.

He went further to assert that PoK was not part of Pakistan and that, in real terms, Pakistan needed PoK more than the people of PoK needed Pakistan, reversing the conventional narrative that the region is dependent on Islamabad.

The latest rally fits into a wider wave of unrest, with protests in Rawalakot and other parts of PoK continuing for over 40 days, initially driven by grievances over soaring electricity tariffs, taxation and living costs but now transformed into a broader movement against systemic exploitation and denial of rights.

Residents accuse Pakistani authorities and the local administration of worsening socio-economic conditions through chronic neglect, corruption, discriminatory resource allocation and a governance structure that leaves decision-making in the hands of the Pakistani military and bureaucracy.

Khan alleged that Pakistan had effectively blocked the supply of food and medicines for the past several weeks, imposing what activists describe as an economic blockade that has created a mounting humanitarian crisis across parts of PoK.

He claimed that for nearly three weeks essential supplies had been choked, with security forces and officials using access to food and medical items as a tool of coercion to break the back of the protest movement.

Against this backdrop, Khan appealed for support not only from people across the Line of Control (LoC) in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir but also from India itself, framing the situation in humanitarian rather than purely political terms.

In public statements and video appeals, he urged India to consider opening the LoC on humanitarian grounds and to facilitate food and medicine supplies if Pakistan continued to block essentials, adding that the people of PoK “need India’s help” under the current conditions.

He also called on residents of Srinagar, Ladakh, Poonch, Rajouri and Jammu to show solidarity with PoK’s population during planned demonstrations, attempting to build a cross-LoC and pan-Jammu and Kashmir constituency against Pakistan’s handling of the region.

During the Rawalakot rally, Khan asked the crowd whether they should march towards the Line of Control in defiance of Pakistani restrictions and military deployments along the frontier.

The protesters responded with repeated and enthusiastic chants of “Move towards it,” indicating a willingness among sections of the crowd to escalate the agitation towards the LoC and symbolically or physically challenge Pakistan’s control.

Khan warned that if the blockade of food, medicines and other necessities persisted, people could be compelled to look to India and possibly even to cross the LoC to escape what they describe as inhuman conditions under Pakistani rule.

He contended that Pakistan’s state machinery – including the military, paramilitary and police forces – was treating unarmed civilians as enemies, while allowing armed jihadi groups and sectarian outfits to operate in the territory in the past under state patronage.

In a separate recent address, Khan had alleged that it was Pakistan’s military that originally supplied weapons and ammunition to Kashmiris, pushing guns across the LoC into Jammu and Kashmir, and was now branding the very same people as “terrorists”.

By contrast, he said, peaceful protesters demanding rights, affordable utilities and an end to exploitation were being declared terrorists and subjected to a harsh crackdown, exposing what he portrayed as Pakistan’s double standards on militancy and civil dissent.

As the movement has expanded, some JAAC leaders have articulated a 38-point charter of demands, warning that if these demands are not accepted and implemented, the agitation could shift beyond economic issues to a full-fledged movement demanding Pakistan’s complete withdrawal from PoK.

The protests, which began with strikes and shutdowns over electricity pricing, taxation levels and wheat flour costs, have thus evolved into a civilian uprising against decades of political disenfranchisement, demographic anxieties and the dominance of the Pakistani military establishment in PoK affairs. Tensions significantly escalated when the unrest turned deadly, with security forces responding with force at several protest sites.

These developments coincide with Pakistan’s broader political and economic turmoil, including high inflation, fiscal stress and civil–military tensions, raising concerns in Islamabad that unrest in PoK could intersect with opposition movements in Pakistan’s heartland.

For India, the situation provides both an opportunity and a challenge: an opportunity to highlight Pakistan’s treatment of people in PoK and to reinforce its legal claim over the territory, but also a challenge in calibrating humanitarian signalling and diplomatic messaging without allowing Pakistan to reframe the unrest as externally instigated.

Regional observers note that any significant loosening of Pakistan’s grip over PoK, whether through sustained protest, international pressure or internal political churn, would have major implications for the Kashmir dispute, regional connectivity routes and the security calculus of both India and Pakistan.

Within the protest movement, leaders like Sardar Aman Khan maintain that their immediate priority is securing basic entitlements, ending economic strangulation and asserting local ownership over land and resources, but their rhetoric on occupation and the possibility of seeking closer ties with India indicates that political reimagining of the region’s future is already underway.

Agencies


'Start-Ups Ignite Growth' — ISRO Chairman On Jobs, Innovation And A Booming Space Economy


India’s private space sector has reached a turning point with Skyroot Aerospace’s Vikram-1 achieving orbital success on its first attempt, a feat hailed by ISRO Chairman Dr V. Narayanan as a “historic milestone” that is creating jobs and boosting the space economy.

The mission underscores how reforms since 2020 have enabled over 400 start-ups to flourish, employing thousands and complementing ISRO’s national programs.

The successful flight test of Vikram-1 was described by Dr Narayanan as a landmark achievement for India’s space ecosystem. He emphasised that a start-up founded in 2018 had managed to succeed on its very first orbital attempt, something unimaginable a decade ago.

He noted that this accomplishment demonstrates how India’s space reforms are opening new opportunities for innovation, employment and economic growth.

Dr Narayanan highlighted that the company behind Vikram-1 now employs around a thousand people. He pointed out that ten years ago, such a scale of private employment in the space sector would have been inconceivable. He added that earlier, only the government was involved in space activities, but today there are around 400 start-ups driving growth and creating numerous job opportunities.

He explained that the broader transformation of India’s space economy is evident in the multiplier effect of private missions. Each successful launch attracts investment, builds supply chains and generates skilled employment across engineering and manufacturing. This, he said, is reshaping the space industry and strengthening India’s position globally.

The ISRO Chairman also confirmed that the organisation is making steady progress on several national missions. He mentioned that a large number of satellites are under construction and development. He specifically referred to Chandrayaan-4, Chandrayaan-5 and India’s space station program, all of which are progressing well. He stressed that private participation will complement ISRO’s ambitious future missions.

Addressing the media after the successful orbital mission, Dr Narayanan said that developing an orbital launch vehicle and achieving mission success on the very first attempt within just eight years of the company’s inception was an extraordinary accomplishment. He described this as a very important moment for India’s space ecosystem and a source of pride for the entire space community.

The achievement was also recognised by the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe). Its Chairman, Dr Pawan Goenka, described the launch as “an India moment,” emphasising that it should not be compared to milestones achieved elsewhere. He formally announced the successful completion of India’s first-ever private sector orbital launch, noting that Vikram-1 had exceeded its primary objective by reaching a 453-km orbit.

The success of Vikram-1 under Mission Aagaman from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota marks India’s entry into the exclusive club of nations where private companies have achieved orbital capability. It reflects years of innovation, perseverance and engineering excellence, and signals the growing maturity of India’s private space sector.

Agencies


Technical Glitch Triggers Brief Hold As Vikram-1 Marks Private Orbital Breakthrough: ISRO Chairman


India’s first privately developed orbital-class rocket, Vikram-1, experienced a brief but tense delay moments before lift-off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota.

The launch, executed by Hyderabad-based start-up Skyroot Aerospace under Mission Aagaman, had been scheduled for late morning following a smooth 36-hour countdown.

The automatic launch sequence was initiated as planned, handing over control gradually from ground systems to the onboard computers that manage final checks and ignition commands. During this critical transition phase, a technical glitch emerged in the interface between the control room systems and the rocket’s onboard computer.

ISRO Chairman V Narayanan explained that the fault occurred when a command was to be sent from the ground segment to the rocket’s computer as part of the fully automated sequence. The anomaly triggered an automatic hold in the sequence only a few minutes before the planned ignition, effectively pausing operations at a point where the system tolerances are extremely tight.

As a result, the launch, originally slated for around 11:30 am, was pushed back by about 35 minutes.

Engineers and mission controllers immediately initiated fault-diagnosis protocols, scrutinising telemetry and system logs to isolate the cause of the glitch. The issue was quickly traced, rectified and verified through repeat checks on the affected link between ground control and the onboard systems.

To ensure full safety margins, the team configured a fresh 20-minute terminal countdown once the glitch had been cleared. This new countdown allowed all critical subsystems to be reconfirmed, including guidance, navigation, control, propulsion, separation systems and range safety.

Following these verifications, the seven-storey-tall Vikram-1, with a lift-off mass of roughly 40–45 tons, finally lifted off at about 12:05 pm from the first launch pad. The rocket ascended under cloudy skies, its trajectory carefully monitored by tracking and telemetry stations to ensure all parameters remained within expected envelopes.

Vikram-1 proceeded through its planned flight sequence, including ignition and separation of multiple stages that use advanced solid propulsion technologies and carbon-fibre structures. After around 15 minutes of flight, the vehicle accurately injected its payloads into the targeted low Earth orbit at an altitude of roughly 450 km and an inclination of about 60 degrees.

This precise orbital insertion validated the core vehicle design, guidance algorithms, avionics architecture and structural margins developed by Skyroot Aerospace. The success marked a historic milestone as Vikram-1 became India’s first privately developed orbital-class rocket to reach space and deploy satellites.

Within the mission, several payloads were carried to demonstrate both commercial and technological capabilities in a single flight. Among the payloads were satellites and technology demonstrators from Indian and international customers, including an in-orbit robotic arm experiment from Telangana-based Cosmoserve Space and hardware from Germany’s DCubed GmbH.

Symbolically, the rocket also carried a handwritten postcard from Prime Minister Narendra Modi bearing the words “Vande Mataram”.

Alongside the Prime Minister’s message, hundreds of letters and notes from Skyroot’s employees and supporters were placed on board as a tribute to the team effort behind the mission. At the Mission Control Centre, the atmosphere shifted from anxiety during the hold to jubilation once confirmation arrived that the rocket had achieved its intended orbit.

ISRO Chairman V Narayanan was seen exchanging congratulations with scientists and officials as the successful outcome of the mission was announced.

He later clarified that while the technical glitch had briefly delayed the launch, the corrective actions were executed quickly and the subsequent lift-off and flight were entirely nominal. Chairman Narayanan  emphasised that such holds during the automatic launch sequence are part of rigorous safety and reliability processes built into India’s launch operations.

He underlined that the system is designed to detect any irregularity and halt the countdown rather than risk an undiagnosed fault at ignition.

The chairman also pointed out that the smooth resolution of the anomaly demonstrated the maturity of both ISRO’s ground infrastructure and Skyroot’s onboard systems.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi personally spoke to Skyroot’s co-founders, Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka, soon after the mission’s success.

He congratulated them on the achievement and described the mission as a significant step in India’s expanding private space ecosystem. The Prime Minister highlighted that Vikram-1’s success marked an important point in India’s journey to becoming a more competitive and influential global spacefaring nation.

He also noted that the mission showcased the potential of public–private collaboration in space, building on reforms that opened launch and satellite services to private players. In attendance at Sriharikota were several high-profile dignitaries from India’s space and political establishment.

ISRO Chairman V Narayanan and IN-SPACe Chairman Pawan Goenka were among the senior officials present on site to witness the launch. Former ISRO Chairman S Somanath, who had overseen earlier phases of India’s space program, also attended, underlining institutional continuity and support. Former ISRO chairmen Dr. K Radhakrishnan, S. Kiran Kumar were also present in the VIP gallery at SHAR.

Andhra Pradesh IT Minister Nara Lokesh was present at the spaceport, accompanied by his son, signalling state-level interest in leveraging the space sector for regional development.

Indian astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla attended as well, representing the emerging era of Indian human spaceflight and the broader ecosystem within which private launches will operate.

The successful orbiting of payloads by Vikram-1 followed Skyroot’s earlier suborbital achievement with Vikram-S in November 2022. Vikram-S had become the first privately built Indian rocket to reach space, serving as a technology demonstrator for propulsion, structures and avionics.

With Mission Aagaman, Skyroot has now transitioned from suborbital demonstration to proven orbital capability, significantly advancing its commercial and technological profile. The company, founded in 2018 by former ISRO engineers Chandana and Daka, has been positioning the Vikram series as a flexible, small-satellite launch solution.

Vikram-1 is designed to deliver payloads to low Earth orbit with a relatively quick turnaround time, targeting the growing market for small satellites and constellation deployments. The rocket makes extensive use of carbon-fibre composite structures and 3D-printed engines in some stages, reflecting the design focus on lightweight and rapid manufacturing.

Its solid propulsion stages are tailored for modularity, allowing future configurations to be tuned for varied payload and orbit requirements.

The brief technical hold highlighted the inherent complexity and risk of launch operations, particularly during the automated final sequence where multiple systems converge.

However, the swift resolution reinforced confidence in the robustness of the launch infrastructure, software safeguards and decision-making protocols at Sriharikota.

For ISRO, the event underscored the evolving role of the agency from sole launcher to an enabler and overseer of private orbital missions. For IN-SPACe, the mission served as a demonstration of India’s regulatory and facilitation framework for non-governmental entities in space.

For Skyroot, the successful completion of Mission Aagaman after an initial glitch became an important proof of resilience as well as technical competence. The 35-minute delay, though dramatic in real time, ultimately had no adverse impact on mission objectives or trajectory design. The experience may in fact contribute to further refinements in automated launch sequences, human–machine interfaces and anomaly-handling procedures for subsequent flights.

The mission’s success is expected to accelerate Skyroot’s plans for operational launches, including commercial rideshare missions and dedicated launches for domestic and international customers. It also strengthens India’s case as a competitive, lower-cost launch hub that now includes both government and private rockets in its inventory. In the wider strategic context, Vikram-1’s debut bolsters India’s space industrial base at a time when many nations are seeking reliable and diversified access to low Earth orbit.

The mission reflects how India’s space program reforms and incentives have enabled start-ups to move from concept to orbit within a relatively short timeframe.

Despite the momentary pause before lift-off, the day will be remembered less for the glitch and more for the fact that India’s first private orbital-class rocket successfully reached space and delivered on its promise.

Agencies


Two US Troops Killed, One Missing As Iran Strikes Jordan Base


Two US service members were killed and one remains missing after Iran launched missile and drone strikes on the Al Azraq base in Jordan, marking a deadly escalation in the ongoing confrontation. Kuwait bore the brunt of wider Iranian attacks, while US forces continued retaliatory strikes on Iranian infrastructure.

The US Central Command confirmed that two service members died on 17 July while defending against Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks. One more is missing in action, and four personnel were evacuated to hospitals in Jordan but later discharged. The identities of the deceased will be withheld until their families are notified.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed responsibility for the strike, saying it targeted the Al Azraq base. Iranian state television reported that the attack destroyed at least two US fighter aircraft and three other aircraft. This follows an earlier attack on 9 July, when Iran fired ten ballistic missiles at the same base, eight of which were intercepted by Jordanian defences.

Responding to the deaths, President Donald Trump described the loss as “a very sad thing” and reiterated that the United States would “never” allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon. His remarks underscored Washington’s determination to maintain military pressure on Tehran.

While Jordan suffered fatalities, Kuwait endured the heaviest bombardment as the conflict entered its seventh consecutive night. Iranian missile and drone attacks disrupted operations at Kuwait International Airport, damaged a desalination plant, and struck an oil facility.

The IRGC claimed it had targeted Camp Arifjan and destroyed a radar facility at Ali Al Salem Air Base. Kuwait Petroleum Corporation confirmed one of its oil facilities was hit, causing significant damage and injuries. Kuwaiti armed forces intercepted several missiles and drones, but firefighters and oil workers were injured while responding to the strikes.

US forces continued their counter-offensive, launching airstrikes on Iranian infrastructure in Hormozgan province. These strikes killed three people and injured eight, damaging two bridges and a road tunnel. Later raids targeted surveillance sites, logistics hubs, underground weapons storage facilities, and maritime capabilities. Iran’s Health Ministry reported that 50 people have been killed and more than 500 injured in US strikes over the past three weeks.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei warned that the United States would face “unforgettable lessons” from Iran and its allies. He accused Washington of repeatedly breaching commitments under a memorandum of understanding and dismissed President Trump’s signature as “utterly worthless and devoid of credibility.” His statement reflected Tehran’s growing defiance as ceasefire efforts collapsed.

The confrontation continues to centre on control of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global shipping route through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes. Iran has accused the US of seeking dominance over the waterway, while Washington has condemned Tehran’s attempts to restrict commercial shipping and target vessels bypassing Iranian checkpoints.

The situation highlights the risk of a wider escalation, with both sides intensifying strikes and regional states like Kuwait and Jordan suffering direct consequences. The collapse of the ceasefire has left the Gulf region exposed to sustained conflict, with fears mounting over the impact on global energy security and maritime trade.

Agencies


US Conducts 'Swift Punishment' Strikes On Iran After Soldiers Killed In Jordan


The United States has launched its eighth consecutive night of strikes against Iran, hours after confirming that two American soldiers were killed in Tehran’s attack on Jordan.

The US Central Command (CENTCOM) said the operation was ordered by President Donald Trump to “swiftly punish” the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces responsible for the assault and to further degrade Iran’s ability to threaten commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

At 6 p.m. ET on Sunday, US forces began launching new airstrikes against Iranian targets. CENTCOM emphasised that the strikes were both retaliatory and preventive, designed to punish Iran for killing American service members and to weaken Tehran’s maritime threat capabilities.

The announcement came shortly after CENTCOM confirmed that two US soldiers were killed on Friday while defending against Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks in Jordan. Another service member remains missing in action.

The US military has now confirmed that 16 personnel have been killed since the war erupted on 28 February, when massive US-Israeli strikes marked the beginning of hostilities. Four American service members were medically evacuated to Jordanian hospitals following the latest attacks but have since been discharged. Others treated for minor injuries have returned to duty.

Iranian state broadcaster reported that fuel tanks at the Al-Azraq US base in Jordan were targeted. The Revolutionary Guards had earlier claimed to have attacked US aircraft stationed in the country with missiles and drones. These developments underscore the escalating cycle of retaliation between Washington and Tehran.

The war resumed earlier this month after the US accused Iran of targeting commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most vital energy conduit. Tehran responded by striking American military sites across Gulf countries, intensifying the confrontation. Smoke was seen rising from unknown locations during the latest US strikes on Iran, highlighting the scale of the bombardment.

The renewed hostilities come just weeks after a preliminary peace deal collapsed. On 17 June, President Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a 14-point agreement aimed at ending the conflict.

The deal called for an immediate cessation of military operations, including in Lebanon, and committed both sides to pursue a final settlement within 60 days. However, Trump declared the deal “over” on 8 July, accusing Tehran of violating commitments. Iran later suspended the memorandum of understanding, charging Washington with breaking all its promises.

Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who succeeded his father Ali Khamenei after he was killed in the strikes on 28 February, condemned the US president’s credibility. In a rare statement on X, he declared that the repeated breaches of the agreement had shown “the worthlessness of the American president’s signature.” He warned that the US would face “unforgettable lessons” from Iran and the Resistance Front if it continued to escalate the conflict.

Major General Mohsen Rezaei, senior military adviser to Khamenei, reinforced the warning by stating that Iran would resume “full-scale offensive operations” if US strikes persisted. He stressed that Tehran would no longer restrict itself to retaliatory, like-for-like responses, signalling a potential expansion of the war.

The situation now reflects a dangerous breakdown of diplomacy, with both sides abandoning commitments and intensifying military operations. The US insists its strikes are necessary to protect its forces and global shipping routes, while Iran vows to escalate its offensive campaign.

The collapse of the June agreement has left the region on the brink of wider conflict, with the possibility of direct clashes spreading across multiple theatres in West Asia.

Agencies


Fresh US Strikes Hit Iran’s Qeshm Island Amid Escalating Gulf Conflict


Fresh US strikes have been reported on Iran’s Qeshm Island, with Iran’s semi-official Tasnim News Agency confirming that at least two explosions were heard during the latest round of military action. 

Emergency, security, and operational teams were immediately deployed to identify the locations hit and assess casualties or damage.

The bombardment formed part of a broader American campaign launched on Saturday, following the deaths of two US service members in Jordan. The fatalities have sharply escalated regional hostilities, with Tehran expanding its offensive across the Gulf and vowing further retaliation.

The US Central Command stated that the two personnel were killed while defending against Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks. Another service member remains missing in action. With these losses, the verified American military death toll has risen to 16 since the outbreak of the conflict on 28 February.

CENTCOM confirmed that the latest strikes marked the eighth consecutive night of military operations. In a statement on X, it said the attacks were designed to degrade Iran’s ability to threaten commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and to punish Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces responsible for the Jordan assault.

Iranian outlets Fars and Tasnim reported that US forces also targeted Sirik, a southern Iranian port city on the Strait of Hormuz. The waterway remains a critical chokepoint for global energy exports, and both sides have sought to leverage control of it in their confrontation.

President Donald Trump defended the campaign in a telephonic interview with The New York Post. He described the deaths of the service members as “a shame” but insisted the mission was vital to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons. He added that the troops had made the ultimate sacrifice to stop Iran’s ambitions, warning that unchecked escalation could engulf the wider region.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei responded by declaring that the persistent assaults had once again demonstrated the worthlessness of the American president’s signature. He accused Washington of inciting war and warned that the Iranian nation and its allies had unforgettable lessons in store for the United States.

Major General Mohsen Rezaei, a senior adviser to Khamenei, cautioned that Tehran would initiate full-scale offensive operations if American bombardments continued. He stressed that Iran would no longer restrict itself to retaliatory, like-for-like responses.

Iran has already carried out retaliatory strikes against Gulf infrastructure, claiming to have targeted an airport, a railway station, and bridges. In Kuwait, authorities confirmed that an oil facility, a power station, and a desalination plant were struck, prompting condemnation for attacks on civilian sites. Anxiety among residents has grown as the conflict drags on.

In Bahrain, the military announced that its air defence systems repelled a wave of Iranian strikes. However, Iranian state media claimed success in hitting a US-utilised air base.

Meanwhile, Iranian television reported that fuel storage tanks at the Al-Azraq US base in Jordan had been hit. The Revolutionary Guards earlier claimed to have struck American aircraft stationed there with missiles and drones. The Jordanian military said it intercepted ten missiles on Saturday, following the downing of three the previous day.

The escalation follows Iranian operations against maritime vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran shut down the strait at the start of hostilities, using its control as leverage in talks with Washington. The US has since reinstated its blockade of Iranian ports, intensifying the confrontation.

Iran’s health ministry reported that fifty people have been killed and more than five hundred injured since the resumption of hostilities. The figures underscore the mounting human cost of the conflict as both sides continue to trade strikes across the Gulf region.

ANI


Zanzibar President Hussein Ali Mwinyi Arrives In New Delhi To Boost India-Tanzania Strategic Partnership


President of Zanzibar, United Republic of Tanzania, and Chairman of the Revolutionary Council, Hussein Ali Mwinyi, arrived in New Delhi late on Saturday as part of his four-day official visit to India. The visit is aimed at strengthening the India-Tanzania Strategic Partnership and expanding cooperation across key sectors.

The Ministry of External Affairs welcomed the visiting leader in a post on X, noting that the visit builds on longstanding people-to-people ties and shared priorities between India and Tanzania as partners in the Global South.

Before arriving in the national capital, President Mwinyi visited Chennai. There, he attended the 63rd Convocation Ceremony of the Indian Institute of Technology Madras as the Chief Guest. His presence carried added significance, as the IIT-Madras Zanzibar campus marked two years since its establishment in October 2023.

The MEA highlighted that the visit reflects the growing momentum in the India-Tanzania Strategic Partnership. It emphasised that President Mwinyi’s engagements in Chennai underscored the importance of educational collaboration, particularly through the IIT-Madras Zanzibar campus, which is the first international campus of an Indian Institute of Technology.

According to the MEA, President Mwinyi’s visit to India, from 17 to 20 July, is taking place at the invitation of Vice President CP Radhakrishnan. He is accompanied by his spouse and a high-level delegation comprising ministers and senior officials.

During his stay in New Delhi, President Mwinyi is scheduled to hold talks with Vice President Radhakrishnan. The discussions will review the full spectrum of India-Tanzania relations and explore new avenues for bilateral cooperation. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar is also expected to call on the visiting leader.

India and Tanzania share longstanding ties of friendship and cooperation across a wide range of sectors. The MEA stated that President Mwinyi’s visit is expected to impart renewed momentum to bilateral relations and further deepen cooperation for the mutual benefit of both countries.

The visit also comes against the backdrop of expanding India’s outreach in Africa, where Tanzania has emerged as a key partner. India has been actively engaging in capacity building, infrastructure development, and defence cooperation with Tanzania, while Zanzibar itself has become a focal point for educational and technological collaboration.

The presence of President Mwinyi at IIT-Madras highlights the importance of academic diplomacy in strengthening bilateral ties.

The Zanzibar campus has been instrumental in offering advanced programs in data science, artificial intelligence, and other frontier technologies, thereby contributing to skill development and innovation in East Africa.

This visit is expected to consolidate cooperation not only in education and technology but also in trade, health, maritime security, and renewable energy, reflecting the shared priorities of both nations as partners in the Global South.

ANI


US Naval Blockade On Iran Escalates As Forces Redirect Five Vessels And Disable One


US Central Command has confirmed that American forces have redirected five commercial vessels and disabled one vessel following the resumption of the naval blockade against Iran. The announcement was made on Saturday, with CENTCOM emphasising that enforcement operations remain ongoing.

The USS Donald Cook, a guided-missile destroyer, was reported to be conducting operations in the Arabian Sea. An MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter was seen flying nearby as part of the blockade enforcement. CENTCOM stated that as of 18 July, five commercial vessels had been redirected and one vessel disabled.

This follows an earlier incident on 15 July, when US forces disabled an empty oil tanker attempting to sail towards an Iranian port. The vessel, identified as the Curacao-flagged M/T Belma, was observed transiting through international waters towards Kharg Island. According to CENTCOM, the ship ignored multiple warnings before a US aircraft fired Hellfire missiles into its smokestack, disabling it permanently.

The blockade was resumed on 16 July, targeting vessels travelling to or from Iranian ports and coastal areas. CENTCOM has stressed that American forces remain vigilant and prepared to ensure full compliance with the measures.

The escalation comes in the aftermath of the collapse of the 14-point Memorandum of Understanding signed last month between Washington and Tehran. The agreement had been intended to reduce hostilities and pave the way for negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program and maritime security in the Strait of Hormuz. Its failure has reignited conflict across West Asia.

Since the collapse, the United States has carried out strikes against Iranian military and civilian assets. Iran has responded with retaliatory attacks on American bases across the Gulf, intensifying the confrontation. The Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy transit route, has once again become the focal point of tensions.

The blockade and subsequent military actions highlight the deteriorating security environment in the region. The US has deployed significant naval and aerial assets to enforce the blockade, while Iran continues to challenge American operations through retaliatory measures.

The situation underscores the fragility of maritime security and the broader geopolitical struggle between Washington and Tehran.

ANI


Khamenei Brands Trump’s Signature Worthless, Calls US 'GREAT SATAN' Warns of Unforgettable Lessons


Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei has delivered a fierce denunciation of the United States, branding it the “Great Satan” and declaring that the signature of President Donald Trump on the 14‑point memorandum of understanding was “utterly worthless.” His remarks came as tensions between Tehran and Washington escalated following the collapse of the agreement intended to ease hostilities.

Khamenei accused the United States of repeatedly violating commitments, asserting that these breaches revealed Washington’s dishonesty, irrationality, unreliability, and malicious intent. He stated that coercion, totalitarianism, and brutality were inseparable elements of the American creed, and that the US had once again exposed its “true, unmasked face” through criminality and broken promises.

In his address to the Iranian nation, Khamenei warned that any further escalation by Washington would come at a heavy cost. He declared that Iran and its Resistance Front had “unforgettable lessons” prepared should the United States continue its strikes against the Islamic Republic.

He emphasised that the American enemy was seeking to intensify the conflict, but would only incur heavier costs and deeper humiliation.

The Supreme Leader praised the valour of Islamic fighters and the honour of the courageous people in southern regions, which have borne the brunt of recent hostilities. He described their resilience as a testament to Iran’s determination to confront its adversaries. He urged national unity, calling on citizens and officials alike to safeguard the country’s dignity and independence against what he termed the “cunning, criminal US enemy.”

Khamenei appealed to the Iranian people to continue supporting national institutions and remain vigilant in protecting the country’s interests. His remarks underscored the importance of solidarity at a time when the nation faces sustained external pressure.

The collapse of the 14‑point MoU, signed last month to open a pathway for negotiations, has reignited conflict across West Asia. The United States has carried out strikes on Iranian military and civilian assets, while Iran has retaliated by targeting American bases across the Gulf. The breakdown of the agreement has thus intensified hostilities, leaving the region once again on edge.

ANI


US And Bangladesh Armies Launch Tiger Lightning 26 Bilateral Exercise In Dhaka


The United States Army and the Bangladesh Armed Forces will officially commence the annual Tiger Lightning exercise on Sunday, as confirmed by the US Embassy in Dhaka.

This bilateral exercise brings together more than 160 service members from both nations, aiming to enhance collaboration and strengthen their ability to operate effectively in real-world scenarios.

Tiger Lightning 26 will focus on jungle operations, counter-terrorism drills, and tactical combat casualty care. These training modules provide both armies with an opportunity to better understand each other’s operational capabilities and approaches to complex battlefield conditions. The exercise is designed to improve readiness and foster interoperability between the two forces.

The program forms part of the United States Army Pacific’s Theatre Army Campaign Plan and broader security cooperation objectives. It seeks to build professional relationships, refine military operations, and increase preparedness for joint missions. Since its inception in 2017, Tiger Lightning has become a cornerstone of US-Bangladesh defence cooperation.

Although briefly paused during the pandemic, the exercise has been conducted consistently for the past five years. Activities are scheduled across classroom and field environments, culminating in a comprehensive field training exercise that will test the skills and coordination of participating troops.

Last year, Tiger Lightning 2025 was inaugurated at the Para Commando Brigade in Jalalabad Cantonment, Sylhet, on 25 July. The opening ceremony was attended by Major General Ascot A. Winter, Deputy Commanding General of USARPAC, who served as the Chief Guest. The exercise was jointly supervised by the Bangladesh Army’s Para Commando Brigade and the Nevada National Guard under USARPAC. It continued for six days until 30 July 2025.

A total of 66 personnel from the Nevada National Guard and 100 personnel from the Bangladesh Army’s Para Commando Brigade took part in Tiger Lightning 2025. Senior officials from the Bangladesh Army, including the Director of Army Air Defence Directorate, the Director of Military Training Directorate, and the Commander of the Para Commando Brigade, were present at the inauguration ceremony, underscoring the importance of the exercise.

Bangladesh and the United States continue to maintain close cooperation in regional and global security, counter-terrorism, disaster management, and humanitarian assistance. Bangladesh remains committed to confronting natural disasters and global threats, working collaboratively with the United States and other partners to strengthen resilience and preparedness.

The exercise is expected to significantly enhance the professional skills of participating troops while further consolidating the defence relationship between the Bangladesh Army and the United States Army. It reflects a shared commitment to regional stability and collective security.

ANI