National Security Current Affairs for UPSC
A complete UPSC revision trail for National Security: 4 published analyses, their syllabus connections and closely related themes.
Where this topic fits in the UPSC syllabus
Complete coverage and analysis
Newest first. Open each article for concepts, evidence, Mains questions and related reading.
Astra Mk-I Missile Explained: Why Indonesia’s Purchase Is a Big Defence Export Moment for India
India and Indonesia have reached a major defence-cooperation milestone with Indonesia becoming the first foreign buyer of India’s indigenous Astra Mk-I BVRAAM. The deal, announced during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Indonesia visit, is important for UPSC because it connects Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence, air-combat technology, India’s defence exports, India-Indonesia ties and the Indo-Pacific security environment.
AI Warfare Explained: How India Can Keep Pace in the Age of Algorithmic Combat
A newspaper analysis has argued that artificial intelligence, autonomy and algorithmic warfare are rapidly reshaping modern battlefields, with examples from Ukraine, West Asia and emerging US autonomous aircraft programmes showing how software, drones, sensors and real-time data are compressing the military decision cycle. The issue is important for UPSC because it links AI warfare, national security, drone swarms, defence indigenisation, cyber warfare, space-based surveillance, start-up-led innovation and the ethics of autonomous weapons.
Agnipath Scheme Review Explained: Why Armed Forces Want Higher Agniveer Retention
The Armed Forces are reportedly seeking a higher retention percentage for Agniveers after completion of their four-year tenure, with the Navy likely to seek around 75% retention and the Army and Air Force around 50%, against the current approved ceiling of 25%. The issue is important for UPSC because it connects military manpower planning, national security, defence reforms, youth employment, training costs, operational readiness and post-service rehabilitation.
INS Mahendragiri Explained: Why Project 17A Stealth Frigates Matter for India’s Maritime Security
The Indian Navy is set to commission Mahendragiri (F38), its sixth indigenous Project 17A stealth frigate, at Visakhapatnam. Designed by the Navy’s Warship Design Bureau and built by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd, the warship highlights India’s shift from a “buyer’s navy” to a “builder’s navy” and strengthens India’s maritime capability in the Indo-Pacific.
Use this as a revision trail
- Start with the newest analysis to understand the present trigger.
- Read older coverage to track how the issue, policy and arguments evolved.
- Open the syllabus links above and turn recurring evidence into Mains notes.