News Live: Watch Times Now Live Streaming | Live News India, World, Politics, Sports News
A 6,670-tonne stealth frigate has just joined the Indian Navy—but INS Mahendragiri is far more than another warship. Built with over 75% indigenous content, it represents India's rapidly maturing defence manufacturing ecosystem and its ambition to field a 200-ship Navy by 2035. Commissioned by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh in Visakhapatnam, Mahendragiri is the sixth Project 17A Nilgiri-class stealth frigate to enter service in just 18 months. Armed with BrahMos cruise missiles, Barak-8 air defence missiles, advanced anti-submarine warfare systems and stealth technology, it is designed for multi-domain combat across the Indo-Pacific. But the real story is the pace. India is no longer building one warship every few years—it is creating a production pipeline. With 45 vessels under construction and another 195 approved, is India finally becoming a true maritime power? Here's why INS Mahendragiri could be a turning point for the Indian Navy.
Related Stories
AI News
Rice in bed for nearly three days before Norway game
9 minutes ago
AI News
World Cup 2026: Norway 1-2 England (AET) - Jude Bellingham the hero again as Three Lions advance to semi
9 minutes ago
AI News
World Cup 2026: Jude Bellingham and Thomas Tuchel's ‘battle of wills’ is healthy for England
10 minutes ago
AI News
Good News: Soccer fan earns World Cup tickets with $2 chores for years
10 minutes ago
AI News
News Live: Watch Times Now Live Streaming | Live News India, World, Politics, Sports News
11 minutes ago
AI News
At least 27 killed in Bangkok bar fire
11 minutes ago
AI News
Caravan park evacuated as fire breaks out
11 minutes ago
AI News
1 dead, 16 taken to hospital following multi
11 minutes ago