Indian Army Showcases AI-Based Technologies at Army House on Vijay Diwas
On the occasion of Vijay Diwas, the Indian Army showcased a range of emerging AI-based technologies at Army House, highlighting its steady shift towards data-driven and technology-enabled operations. Among the key systems displayed were an AI-Based Satellite Imagery Analysis system and the Agentic AI-in-a-Box, both reflecting the Army’s emphasis on indigenous innovation and operational self-reliance.
The AI-Based Satellite Imagery Analysis system, conceptualised as an IDEX project to promote Atmanirbharta, has been developed by Cyran AI, an IIT Delhi–incubated startup. The platform significantly enhances the Army’s geospatial intelligence capabilities by integrating advanced analytics across Electro-Optical (EO), Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), Hyperspectral and Infrared imagery. Using artificial intelligence, the system can identify objects, detect changes across 40 classes, process UAV imagery feeds and generate real-time event alerts to support operational decision-making. By transforming raw imagery into actionable intelligence, it reduces analysis time and improves situational awareness for commanders across operational theatres.
Complementing this capability, the Army also showcased Agentic AI-in-a-Box, a compact and rugged AI operating system designed for the demanding and communication-degraded environments in which the Armed Forces operate. Built in collaboration with leading research institutions and industry partners, the system represents a major step towards deploying battlefield-ready, sovereign AI. Crucially, it operates independently of cloud networks, delivering real-time intelligence, autonomous decision support and secure mission continuity even in fully air-gapped conditions.
Powered by KOGO OS, AI-in-a-Box supports customisable AI agents for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) fusion, logistics automation, predictive analytics and multilingual voice-based commands, while maintaining enterprise-grade security. Engineered around Indian Army workflows, the platform supports applications ranging from video and imagery detection to predictive maintenance and knowledge management. With over 500 mission connectors, it allows rapid task customisation across operational and humanitarian missions.
Both systems align with the Indian Army’s Vision 2047 and the ongoing Decade of Transformation, which emphasise technology absorption, joint development and operational relevance. Developed under collaborative models involving academia, industry and the Army as the end user.
Every year, the Indian Army marks Vijay Diwas to commemorate India’s decisive victory in the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971 and this year the occasion carried Operation Sindoor as its central theme, linking the legacy of that historic triumph with the Army’s contemporary operational experience and transformation.