Indian AI Combat Drone 'Kaal Bhairava' to Enter European Manufacturing Network

Indian AI warfare company FWDA has partnered with Portuguese defence firm SKETCHPIXEL to manufacture the autonomous combat aircraft 'Kaal Bhairava' in Europe. The drone features AI-driven target recognition, encrypted communications, and swarm coordination capabilities with a 3,000 km range. FWDA retains intellectual property rights for the aircraft's autonomous systems and airframe design. The collaboration aims to position India as a leading global defence exporter and integrate its technologies into European and NATO-linked networks.

Key Points: Indian AI Drone Kaal Bhairava Enters European Manufacturing

  • Indian AI combat drone Kaal Bhairava to be manufactured in Europe
  • FWDA partners with Portuguese firm SKETCHPIXEL
  • Aircraft has 3,000 km range, 30+ hours endurance
  • India aims to become a global defence manufacturing hub
2 min read

Indian AI combat drone 'Kaal Bhairava' to enter European manufacturing network

India's AI combat drone Kaal Bhairava, developed by FWDA, enters European manufacturing via a partnership with Portugal's SKETCHPIXEL, boosting defence exports.

"The larger objective is to help position India among the world's leading defence exporters. - Suhas Tejaskanda"

New Delhi, May 15

In a major boost to India's ambitions of becoming a global defence manufacturing hub, Indian AI warfare company FWDA on Friday announced that its autonomous combat aircraft 'Kaal Bhairava' will now be manufactured in Europe through a strategic partnership with Portuguese defence technology firm SKETCHPIXEL.

The collaboration marks a significant milestone for India's indigenous defence technology ecosystem, as Kaal Bhairava becomes one of the first Indian-designed AI combat aircraft platforms to enter the European manufacturing and defence network.

SKETCHPIXEL is known for developing advanced fighter jet simulation systems for aircraft such as the F-16 Fighting Falcon.

Under the agreement, the European company will contribute simulation technologies, AI integration systems, communications infrastructure and interoperability capabilities for the aircraft platform.

FWDA, however, will continue to retain intellectual property rights related to the aircraft's autonomous systems and airframe design.

Kaal Bhairava has been designed as a medium-altitude long-endurance autonomous combat aircraft with a range of 3,000 kilometres and an operational endurance of more than 30 hours.

The aircraft is equipped with AI-driven target recognition systems, encrypted communications and swarm coordination capabilities, positioning it among next-generation autonomous warfare platforms.

Unlike traditional aerospace programmes that focus heavily on expensive manned platforms, FWDA is building an ecosystem centred around autonomous airpower, swarm technologies and advanced air defence systems.

Commenting on the development, FWDA founder and CEO Suhas Tejaskanda said the partnership reflects increasing global interest in Indian-designed autonomous warfare technologies and demonstrates how Indian defence innovation is beginning to integrate into global manufacturing ecosystems.

He added that Portugal's strategic location and access to NATO-linked defence networks would help the company expand collaborative opportunities across Europe and support future global deployment pathways for its technologies.

"The larger objective is to help position India among the world's leading defence exporters," he stated.

SKETCHPIXEL CEO Miguel Abrue said the collaboration would combine FWDA's expertise in engineering, electronics, AI systems and chip analysis with SKETCHPIXEL's capabilities in simulation, interoperability and military integration.

He said that critical aspects of the aircraft programme -- including structural design, firmware development, communication systems, control mechanisms and validation processes -- would be jointly developed under strict technological and safety standards.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Good to see India stepping into autonomous warfare tech, but I have some concerns. Swarm coordination and AI target recognition are powerful, but who ensures the ethical use and accountability? Drone warfare can easily escalate. I hope proper regulations and fail-safes are built in. Still, proud moment for defense innovation.
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Michael C
Impressive that a Portuguese defense firm is collaborating on this — SKETCHPIXEL has good simulation tech from their F-16 work. The 3,000 km range and 30-hour endurance are competitive with platforms like the MQ-9 Reaper. Keeping IP on autonomous systems is a smart move. This could open up NATO procurement pathways for India, and the joint development of firmware and control mechanisms is solid.
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Vikram M
Wah yaar! Portuguese company ke saath partnership, aur India ka naam Europe ke defense network mein. Aur sabse badi baat — humne apna IP protect rakh liya! Baat sirf drone ki nahi, yeh ecosystem hai: autonomous airpower, swarm tech, air defense. Desh ka global standing badhega. Government ko aise initiatives aur support dene chahiye.
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Emma D
This is a fascinating development from an Indo-European defense perspective. The focus on AI-driven systems and swarm capability rather than expensive manned aircraft is a forward-looking strategy. However, I wonder about the real-world testing and validation against cyber threats. For NATO interoperability, those standards are rigorous. Hope the joint development phase includes thorough security audits.
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Rohit P

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