In a striking admission, Pakistan has acknowledged receiving real-time satellite intelligence from China during its recent military standoff with India. This development has triggered renewed urgency in New Delhi to fast-track its military space program and bridge the widening gap with China’s space-based surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities.
Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif, speaking on record earlier this year, confirmed that Islamabad was aided by Chinese military satellites during the conflict. Calling it “a normal practice,” Asif defended the cooperation as part of the ongoing China–Pakistan strategic alignment. “Intelligence-sharing with China is very natural,” he told Arab News, while denying that Chinese personnel were directly involved in Pakistan’s military operations. “Our armed forces carried out the operations. But if someone shared information with us, that is very normal,” he added.
China’s ISR Footprint in the Indo-Pak Conflict
Indian defence analysts and security officials say Chinese satellite assistance played a critical role in enhancing Pakistan’s battlefield awareness. Reports suggest that up to 44 Chinese satellites, including units from the Yaogan series known for high-resolution Earth observation and signals intelligence (ELINT), were re-tasked to monitor Indian troop and air movements across the western theatre.
A recent analysis by the Centre for Joint Warfare Studies (CENJOWS), affiliated with India’s Ministry of Defence, noted that Chinese support enabled Pakistan to “realign its radars, shift air defence assets, and bolster situational awareness” just ahead of key phases in the escalation.
Sources claim that the ISR support helped Pakistan achieve what analysts call a “kill chain” capability, possibly contributing to the targeting of Indian fighter aircraft and missile deployments.
The Space Gap: A Strategic Vulnerability
The episode has reignited concern over the vast disparity between India and China in terms of space-based assets. While India operates around 218 satellites, China has over 5,300 in orbit, with a significant share devoted to military surveillance.
“China currently operates 30–40 dedicated reconnaissance satellites and is likely hiding more under dual-use cover,” said a senior Indian defence official. “They have seven geo-stationary surveillance satellites, which gives them near-continuous visibility over the Indo-Pacific.”
In contrast, India’s surveillance is largely dependent on a smaller constellation of Earth Observation (EO), radar imaging, and electronic intelligence satellites. The NavIC navigation system, India’s indigenous GPS alternative, suffered a setback in January 2025 after the NVS-02 satellite failed to reach its designated orbit due to a thruster malfunction.
India’s Response: A Rapid Space Build-Up
In response to the growing threats, India is ramping up its space defence strategy:
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52 new military satellites are planned over the next five years to support surveillance, secure communications, and real-time battlefield awareness.
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The Defense Space Agency, formed in 2019, is being upgraded toward a full-fledged Space Command.
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The Indian Air Force’s air command systems are being restructured to evolve into the Integrated Air and Space Command and Control System (IASCCS).
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Public–private partnerships are being fostered, with Tata Advanced Systems having already launched a reconnaissance satellite in April 2024.
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Satellites such as EMISAT, Kautilya ELINT, and the RISAT-2B/2BR1 radar series continue to enhance India’s ability to detect troop movements, radars, and missile systems.
India’s satellite-based electronic intelligence (ELINT) systems have already been instrumental in monitoring Chinese activities along the Line of Actual Control, including PLA deployments in Tibet and the Eastern Sector.
The Long Road Ahead
Despite recent progress, senior military planners acknowledge that India remains years behind China in space militarization. China’s Beidou satellite navigation system offers the PLA precision targeting and global independence from U.S. GPS networks- an edge India is still building toward with NavIC.
A top official involved in India’s space defence planning admitted: “They have 4–5 times more space assets than us. But we’re narrowing the gap, fast. We’ve learned our lesson the hard way.” India’s first significant wake-up call came during the 1999 Kargil conflict when U.S. denial of GPS data impacted Indian operations. Since then, New Delhi has gradually built indigenous capabilities but the 2025 conflict with Pakistan has pushed the urgency to a new level.
Strategic Takeaway
Pakistan’s admission that China played a decisive ISR role has catalyzed a major doctrinal shift in Indian defence policy. What was once considered supplementary space-based military intelligence is now a core element of India’s national security strategy.
With growing Chinese influence in South Asia, including Beijing’s expanding footprint in Pakistan and the Indian Ocean region, India’s space race is no longer about prestige. It’s about survival, deterrence, and ensuring no future conflict is fought in the shadows of foreign satellites.
