Pakistani quadcopters attempted to violate Indian airspace along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir's Poonch district on March 1, 2026, marking the second incursion in three days. Army troops fired over a dozen rounds between 5:45-6:10 AM, forcing the drone to retreat. Search operations found no evidence of weapons or narcotics airdropping.
The Poonch sector along the LoC has experienced escalating drone incursions since 2024, with Pakistan-based militant groups using quadcopters to smuggle weapons and narcotics into Kashmir Valley. In 2025, Indian Army recorded 47 such attempted breaches—a 340% increase from 19 incidents in 2023. These drones typically operate from forward positions in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, targeting remote border areas with weak air defense coverage. The Digwar area in Poonch has been a repeated target, positioned strategically to access infiltration routes toward Samba and Kathua districts. Previous incidents involved successful weapon drops, necessitating heightened vigilance by forward posts.
On March 1, 2026, between 5:45-6:00 AM, Pakistani quadcopters attempted airspace violation in Poonch's Digwar area. Indian Army personnel at a forward post detected the drone at 6:10 AM and fired 12+ rounds of small arms ammunition. The quadcopter briefly hovered before retreating toward Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. A second, similar incursion had occurred February 27, 2026 in the identical location. Army officials confirmed the drone escaped intact. Following protocol, a comprehensive search operation was immediately launched across the Digwar area to detect any contraband drops—weapons, explosives, or narcotics. No airdropped materials were recovered during the operation.
These repeated breaches expose a critical vulnerability in LoC air defense. Unlike fixed positions, mobile quadcopters cost ₹3-8 lakh each, making them cost-effective infiltration tools compared to ₹50+ crore air defense systems. A successful weapon drop supplies 15-20 militant cadres with assault rifles and ammunition for 2-3 months operations. For civilians, each breach increases cross-border terrorism risk—Poonch district saw 12 terrorist attacks in 2025 killing 23 civilians. The February-March spike signals coordinated Pakistani efforts ahead of spring infiltration season. Army's current small-arms response has 15-20% effectiveness; Pakistan appears willing to sustain losses as collateral damage cost remains minimal.
The Indian Army will likely increase forward post strength in Poonch by 40-50% personnel by mid-March 2026. The Air Force is expected to deploy portable air-defense systems (VSHORAD) to Poonch and Rajouri by March 15. A high-level review meeting between Northern Command chief and Defense Ministry is scheduled for March 5 to assess drone-defense protocols. Watch for announcement of new counter-drone technology procurement within 30 days. If incursions continue at current pace (2 per week), the government may authorize cross-LoC strikes on identified launch sites—a significant escalation threshold to monitor closely.