The Franco-Indian duo
The duo will not win everywhere, but it will win where:
- sovereignty matters
- duration matters
- military credibility is sought after
China is beginning to cause concern: yes, the Franco-Indian duo will be in direct competition with China in the South:
Not on price, not on volume, but on sovereignty, credibility and strategic autonomy.
It is asymmetrical competition, and that is precisely why it is dangerous for Beijing.
The drone is no longer a weapon: it is a grammar. For 20 years, the West has seen the drone as a sensor, precision munition, an appendage to manned aviation. The war in Ukraine has shown something else: drones have become a syntax of combat: reconnaissance, strikes, saturation, deception, electronic warfare, industrial attrition.
It is no longer a system, it is a language. The moment when everything changes: Ukraine 2022–2025. Three truths have emerged. Mass beats perfection:
A €3,000 drone that destroys a €3 million system changes the economic logic of war. Russia, Ukraine, and then all observers understood that victory depends on the ability to produce, lose, and replace quickly.
The decision-making cycle collapses: drones shorten the detection => decision => strike cycle from minutes to seconds. Combat becomes tactical, decentralised and algorithmic.
The sky becomes saturated; there is no longer ‘air superiority’ but rather the management of a permanently hostile environment.
Three models of drone power
China: industrial saturation: mass production, standardisation, civil-military integration, export without political constraints
China does not sell ‘drones’; it sells aerial submersion capability, ideal for authoritarian or fragile states.
United States: drones as multipliers of existing systems: Loyal Wingman, advanced ISR, integration into network-centric combat, heavy software dependency, high performance, expensive, dependent, not easily exportable outside the immediate circle.
Emerging model: drones as tactical autonomy
The Franco-Indian model (in development) has not yet been formalised, but it already exists in practice.
Key principle:
Drones must be simple, modular, locally producible and consumable.
India contributes: volume, frugal engineering, acceptance of loss, experience of hybrid conflict
France brings: sensors, electronic warfare, system integration, multi-environment doctrine.
Result:
Consumable tactical drones, loitering munitions, rugged ISR drones, sober C2 systems.
This appeals to the Global South because drones avoid dependence on Western aircraft, circumvent embargoes, do not require a heavy aeronautical elite, and can be produced locally.
For a country in the Global South, drones provide immediate access to tactical deterrence.
The real shock for Western armies
- Drones have highlighted an uncomfortable truth:
- Western stocks are insufficient
- industrial production is too slow
- doctrine is still ‘platform-centric’
- warfare is becoming industrial before it is technological
The war in Ukraine reveals a brutal fact: a modern army does not lose because it is technologically inferior, it loses because it cannot replace what it consumes.
Rafale + drones: not an opposition, a hierarchy
The common mistake is to think that drones will replace aircraft. The reality is that the aircraft becomes the conductor, the drone becomes the mass, and the missile becomes the punctuation.
A Rafale without drones is vulnerable. Drones without Rafale are blind at high intensity.
And tomorrow:
- semi-autonomous swarms
- expendable drones
- local embedded AI
- decentralised production
- ‘acceptable loss’ doctrine
Superiority will no longer come from the best platform but from the ability to lose without collapsing.
Conclusion: China has understood mass, the United States has mastered the system, and the Franco-Indian duo could master the balance. Not domination, but resilience.
And in the world to come, resilience will beat perfection.
If Ukraine ‘enters’ a Franco-Indian axis through the door of drones, with Western support of the Rafale/Caesar type, the implications are major. The Rafale/Caesar exchange for drones is Rafale = brain, drones = mass, artillery = hammer
For Ukraine: a shift from survival to industrial sovereignty; for France: a power multiplier at an acceptable cost; for India: a huge opportunity... but maximum caution. Indeed, India does not want to be perceived as an anti-Russian co-belligerent. India could accept a France-Ukraine-India triangle on drones, but in a discreet, modular, non-ideological mode.