Its a massive victory for R&AW chief Parag Jain who spearheaded the ban starlink proposal! India was offered Starlink and sadly some top politicians started getting way too excited about it. R&AW chief Parag Jain who is a technocrat himself had to step in and present a report to the Prime Minister’s Office
@PMOIndia highlighting the repercussions and strategic paralysis Starlink could bring along with it. The report underlined how Ukraine’s drone strikes deep inside Russia have changed the way modern warfare works. Smart low-flying drones linked through Starlink can quietly glide past radar and hit deep inside enemy lines. These drones use simple glide technology and AI to fly low, stay hidden, and make last-second target corrections using real-time Starlink feeds. With thousands of satellites in low orbit, Starlink provides fast, jam-resistant connections that even advanced Russian systems struggle to block. The result is drones that act like guided missiles, silent, precise, and hard to intercept. But the same technology that gives Ukraine an edge can also be turned around. Russia has already tested Starlink-style systems on its own Shahed drones. That shows how relying on a foreign satellite network is risky because a single software lock or policy change can cut off entire defense operations overnight. For India, this is not paranoia, it is preparedness. If Starlink becomes the main satellite network here, it could also become a potential backdoor for hybrid warfare. India’s move to build its own secure satellite internet, like through Jio’s upcoming space projects, is the right step. Controlling the signal means controlling the battlefield. Banning Starlink in India is not fearmongering, it is common sense in an age where wars are fought through data, drones, and digital skies.