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India commissions three home-built warships in one day at Kolkata

India commissions three home-built warships in one day at Kolkata

Modi inducts INS Dunagiri, Sanshodhak and Agray as a marker of self-reliant defence — and an answer to PLAN's Indian Ocean push

Leaders·Defence· active El juego largo·Quién decide·El cambio silencioso ·15 takes ·actualizado 24 jun 2026

Summary

Narendra Modi commissioned three indigenously designed warships in a single ceremony at Kolkata's Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port on 21 June 2026: Indian Navy's stealth frigate INS Dunagiri (Project 17A, ~6,700 tonnes, eight Brahmos missiles), the survey vessel INS Sanshodhak, and the anti-submarine craft INS Agray. All were designed by the Navy's Warship Design Bureau and built by Kolkata's Grse, with over 75% indigenous content and 200-plus Msme suppliers — the first time one Indian yard inducted three surface platforms in a day. Modi cast it as proof India has gone from arms buyer to builder, noting defence output rose from Rs 40,000 crore (2014) to ~Rs 1.8 lakh crore. It is one of a record 19 warships India plans to commission in 2026.

The split

Indian mainstream press (The Week, ANI) frames it as Atmanirbhar Bharat arriving at sea; Indian critics (Outlook) ask whether ~Rs 4,000-5,000 crore per frigate buys enough fleet fast enough. Beijing's Global Times is dismissive — citing carrier Vikrant's pitching defect, lagging radar and a ~12.3% manpower gap to question readiness. Pakistan's Dawn answers with its own China-built Hangor submarines and a sea-denial posture. Russia's korabel.ru quietly notes India's blue-water build still rides on Russian-origin Tushil and Tamal frigates.

By the numbers

  • 6,700 tonnes — displacement of INS Dunagiri (Project 17A stealth frigate).
  • 75%+ — stated indigenous content; 200+ MSMEs in the supply chain.
  • 19 — warships India plans to commission in 2026, a single-year record.
  • ~140 — India's current battle fleet (officials say ~60% fully battle-ready).
  • ~395 — PLA Navy hulls projected by end-2025, rising toward 435 by 2030.
  • ~10,900 — Indian Navy personnel shortfall cited by Global Times (12.3% of strength).

Why it matters

The induction is India's clearest claim yet to a self-built blue-water navy aimed at the Indian Ocean, where China's PLAN and Pakistan's Chinese-supplied submarines are expanding. It anchors Modi's self-reliance narrative ahead of the 200-ship goal — while the readiness and manpower gaps rivals flag remain unresolved.

What to watch

  • Pace toward the 2026 target of 19 commissionings and the 200-ship fleet by 2035.
  • Whether the Japan Mogami-class frigate design transfer to Indian yards proceeds.
  • PLAN deployments and Pakistan's Hangor-class submarine inductions in the Arabian Sea.
  • Closure of the manpower shortfall and the "Fight" (weapons/sensor) indigenisation gap.