Indian army launched two new digital platforms, ‘Kautilya’ and ‘Q-FORCE’, to improve real-time decision making, logistic management and battlefield support. The initiated shows a major push by the army towards integrating Artificial Intelligence and data driven systems into its operational framework.The ‘Kautilya’ focuses on structured data generation, AI-enabled analytics and NLP (Natural language processing) powered interface. On the other hand, ‘Q-FORCE’ is aimed at streamlining logistics, inventory and sustainment management across varied operational terrains. The development comes amid a wider global military transition towards AI-assisted warfare.Modern battlefields generate massive amounts of information from surveillance systems, drones, troop movements, other sensors and operational reports. AI-enabled systems can help military commanders process this data faster and improve situational awareness. Indian army publicly stated that 2026 will be the year of networking and data centricity, while 2027 will focus on the full integration of operations with artificial intelligence.Militaries around the world are integrating artificial intelligence into warfare and command operations. US military programs like Project Maven, analyse drone surveillance footage and identify military targets faster. Overtime it evolved into a much larger battlefield intelligence and command support ecosystem. China on the other hand works on a ‘Intelligentised Warfare’, a military doctrine focused on combining AI, big data, autonomous systems and battlefield networks to accelerate decision making and operational effectiveness.During Operation Sindoor, Indian armed forces achieve nearly 94% accuracy in identifying and striking targets said Lt Gen Rajiv Kumar Sahni, who was serving as Director General of Information Systems during the operation. Army fused data from multiple sensors, weapons systems, drones and intelligence feed to create a real time operational picture.In recent years, India has accelerated its military AI efforts with testing and integrating AI-enabled surveillance systems and autonomous platforms. However, India still working on developing large-scale military AI software ecosystems, including advance data integration platforms and sophisticated AI driven decision support systems.The launch of ‘Kautilya’ and ‘Q-FORCE’ signals Indian army is moving towards to adapt new era of warfare where data, algorithms and logistics speed are becoming as important as conventional military strength.