Pakistan Expands Spy Satellite Network Targeting India

by Chief Editor

Pakistan has rapidly expanded its orbital surveillance capabilities, placing roughly half a dozen satellites into space between January 2025 and April 2026. This sudden surge in activity—supported by Chinese launch infrastructure—has equipped Islamabad with the ability to monitor Indian military movements, naval assets, and border territories with increased frequency and high-resolution imaging, according to reports from ThePrint.

Why Pakistan’s Recent Satellite Launches Are Raising Alarm

The pace of Pakistan’s space program represents a “structural discontinuity” rather than an incremental update, according to Sudhir Pillai, a former flag officer of the Indian Navy. Since the launch of Badr-1 in 1990, Pakistan’s space agency, SUPARCO, historically maintained a slow mission cadence. However, in the 16 months leading up to June 2026, the agency conducted six launches. This shift suggests a deliberate effort to establish a persistent “multi-modal ISR constellation” capable of tracking real-time military movements and identifying camouflaged assets.

From Instagram — related to Sudhir Pillai, Indian Navy

How Orbital Architecture Enables Constant Surveillance

Unlike traditional Earth-observation satellites that rely on Sun-synchronous orbits for consistent lighting, Pakistan’s PRSC-EO3 satellite utilizes a 38-degree inclined orbit. According to the US-based firm COMSPOC, this configuration sacrifices global coverage to prioritize frequent revisits over a specific latitude band covering India, Pakistan, and the Kashmir region. This allows for a denser stream of imagery, potentially providing multiple passes over the same location each day. By leveraging hyperspectral technology, these satellites can distinguish between materials and detect structural changes that standard optical sensors might miss.

The China-Pakistan Space Partnership

Experts argue that Pakistan’s space ambitions are deeply intertwined with Chinese technical and launch support. According to a former ISRO official, China’s satellite constellations—such as the Yaogan and Gaofan series—already provide extensive surveillance over Indian territory. Reports from the Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (MP-IDSA) indicate that the Yaogan series offers all-weather, day-and-night capabilities, including the detection of naval vessels. Furthermore, Prakhar Gupta noted in Swarajya that Pakistan’s transition to China’s BeiDou navigation system has provided its military with high-precision targeting data for missiles and naval platforms.

India’s Strategic Challenges in Space

The rise in Pakistan’s surveillance capabilities coincides with a difficult period for India’s own space program. Between 2025 and 2026, India experienced three significant failures involving strategic satellites. These included the loss of the EOS-N1 (Anvesha) in January 2026, the EOS-09 (RISAT-1B) in May 2025, and the NVS-02 mission in January 2025. According to industry experts, these setbacks have prompted concerns that India may have prioritized high-profile scientific missions, such as Chandrayaan and Gaganyaan, at the expense of urgent strategic and reconnaissance requirements.

India Fast-Tracks Spy Satellite Launches After Last Year's Pakistan Border Clash

Pro Tip: The Reality of Commercial Imagery

Space strategy expert Ashwin Prasad Rao of the Takshashila Institution warns that the distinction between “civilian” and “military” satellites is increasingly blurred. Modern Earth-observation assets can be tasked by paying customers, and as seen in recent global conflicts, imagery access can be restricted or directed at the behest of home governments, making independent national surveillance capabilities essential.

Pro Tip: The Reality of Commercial Imagery

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Why is the 38-degree orbit significant? It allows the satellite to pass over South Asia more frequently than a standard polar orbit, enabling near-constant monitoring of specific Indian territories.
  • How does hyperspectral imaging work? It captures images across hundreds of wavelengths, allowing analysts to identify materials and camouflage that are invisible to the naked eye.
  • Is the China-Pakistan space cooperation new? While collaboration has existed for years, experts describe the recent increase in launch frequency and technology sharing as a marked shift in strategic capability.

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