India has told Pakistan to control ‘drone intrusions’, Indian army chief says

India has formally escalated diplomatic pressure on Pakistan regarding unauthorized aerial surveillance activities along their contested border. General Manoj Pande, India’s Chief of Army Staff, confirmed on Tuesday that his nation’s military leadership has directly contacted Pakistan’s Director General of Military Operations regarding repeated drone intrusions originating from Pakistani territory.

According to Indian defense sources, the most recent incident occurred on Sunday evening when five separate drone incursions were detected along the sensitive frontier in the Jammu sector of Indian-administered Kashmir. This strategically significant region has long been a focal point of territorial disputes between the nuclear-armed neighbors.

The formal military communication represents a significant escalation in how India is addressing border security concerns. Rather than handling the matter through lower-level channels, the involvement of both nations’ top military operational commanders indicates the seriousness with which New Delhi is treating these aerial violations.

These developments occur amid ongoing regional tensions and reflect the continuing technological evolution of border surveillance and potential security threats. Drones have increasingly become tools of modern military intelligence gathering and potential provocations in conflict zones worldwide.

The Jammu and Kashmir region has witnessed numerous border skirmishes and diplomatic standoffs between India and Pakistan over decades. The latest drone incidents add a technological dimension to these longstanding territorial disputes, challenging traditional border security protocols and requiring updated defense responses.