🌍 INTERNATIONAL

Exercise PRAGATI 2026: India’s First Multilateral IOR Drill

India launches inaugural Exercise PRAGATI 2026 at FTN Umroi, Meghalaya with 12 IOR nations. Full form, Act East Policy, CT/CI focus & exam MCQs for UPSC, NDA & SSC.

⏱️ 13 min read
📊 2,586 words
📅 May 2026
UPSC Banking SSC CGL NDA GLOBAL NEWS

“PRAGATI — progress — is both what this exercise is named for and what it represents: the forward movement of India’s regional security partnerships from bilateral exchange to structured multilateral cooperation.”

The Indian Army formally commenced the inaugural edition of multilateral military exercise PRAGATI 2026 on 20 May 2026 at the Foreign Training Node (FTN), Umroi Military Station, near Shillong, Meghalaya. The two-week exercise, scheduled from 18 to 31 May 2026, brings together armed forces from India and 12 friendly foreign nations in a structured platform focused on counter-terrorism, jungle warfare, and joint operational readiness in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).

Being the maiden edition of the exercise, PRAGATI 2026 represents a new institutional tier in India’s multilateral defence diplomacy with its extended neighbourhood. A distinctive feature is an integrated Aatmanirbhar Bharat defence exposition, co-organised with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI), running alongside the military drills.

13 Nations Participating (India + 12)
14 Days of Exercise (18–31 May)
7 ASEAN Nations Participating
2026 Inaugural (1st) Edition
📊 Quick Reference
Full Name (Acronym) Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the IOR
Dates 18–31 May 2026
Venue FTN Umroi, near Shillong, Meghalaya
Host Indian Army (Eastern Command)
Industry Partner FICCI (defence exposition)
Policy Linkage Act East Policy + Neighbourhood First

📜 What Is PRAGATI? Acronym, Mandate, and Principles

PRAGATI stands for Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region. It is a premier multinational military exercise hosted by the Indian Army, designed as a unified institutional platform where regional armies can exchange battlefield experiences, harmonise tactical doctrines, and develop joint response mechanisms against contemporary non-traditional security threats.

The exercise is governed by core principles of mutual respect, equality, and shared commitment to regional security — deliberately positioning it as a non-hierarchical platform accessible to smaller as well as larger partner nations. The word pragati also means “progress” in Hindi and several Indian languages, signifying the exercise’s orientation toward forward movement in regional security cooperation.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of PRAGATI as the Indian Army’s version of a regional “security study group” — but with live drills. While MILAN is the Indian Navy’s big multilateral exercise, PRAGATI does the same job for land forces across the Indian Ocean region. It’s like a school for coalition warfare: 13 armies practice working together before they actually need to in a real crisis.

🌍 Participating Nations and Regional Coverage

India is hosting 12 friendly foreign countries (FFCs) in the inaugural edition: Bhutan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Seychelles, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam.

The participant list spans three sub-regions: ASEAN nations (Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Vietnam — 7 of 12 partners), India’s South Asian neighbours (Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka), and the Western Indian Ocean island state of Seychelles. The FICCI event page indicates that 15 countries were originally invited, including Bangladesh, Singapore, and Thailand — signalling scope for expansion in future editions.

Sub-Region Participating Nations Count
ASEAN Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Vietnam 7
South Asia Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka 4
Western Indian Ocean Seychelles 1
Total (excl. India) 12 Friendly Foreign Countries 12
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t say “12 countries” — the correct count is 13. India plus 12 friendly foreign nations = 13 participating countries in total. However, the standard phrasing in official releases is “India and 12 FFCs.” Also note: Bangladesh, Singapore, and Thailand were invited but are not listed as confirmed participants in the inaugural edition — don’t include them in MCQ answers about participating nations.

📌 Location: FTN Umroi and the Northeast India Gateway

The exercise is conducted at the Foreign Training Node (FTN) at Umroi, approximately 20 kilometres from Shillong, the capital of Meghalaya. Umroi is a well-established hub for international military exercises under the Indian Army’s Eastern Command. It has previously hosted bilateral exercises including Nomadic Elephant (India–Mongolia), KazInd (India–Kazakhstan), and Vajra Prahar (India–US special forces).

The choice of Northeast India carries deliberate strategic logic. Meghalaya shares its border with Bangladesh and is geographically proximate to Southeast Asia via Myanmar — the land bridge connecting the Indian subcontinent with the ASEAN mainland. The terrain (dense jungle, undulating hills, semi-mountainous features) mirrors operational environments in many participating nations and is ideal for counter-terrorism training. Conducting the exercise here also reinforces India’s policy of leveraging the North-East Region (NER) as a gateway to Southeast Asia under the Act East Policy.

✓ Quick Recall: Other Exercises at FTN Umroi

FTN Umroi, Meghalaya has hosted: Nomadic Elephant (India–Mongolia), KazInd (India–Kazakhstan), Vajra Prahar (India–USA special forces). PRAGATI 2026 is the first multilateral exercise hosted at Umroi — all previous exercises at this venue were bilateral.

✨ Training Objectives and Key Operational Features

The two-week exercise operates across several integrated domains:

  • Counter-Terrorism / Counter-Insurgency (CT/CI) Drills: Live-fire simulation, tactical field drills, and joint command planning in jungle and semi-mountainous terrain — with limited visibility, restricted communication, and complex navigation challenges
  • Joint Command Planning: Combined exercises to develop common Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and operational frameworks for coalition operations
  • Intelligence Synchronisation: Development of synchronised concepts for real-time management, analysis, and secure sharing of intelligence in a multinational environment — the most demanding component of coalition operations
  • HADR Training: Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief scenarios — rapid joint response to natural disasters consistent with IOR’s vulnerability to cyclones, floods, and tsunamis
  • Aatmanirbhar Bharat Defence Exposition: Indigenous Indian defence companies showcase weaponry, tactical equipment, surveillance systems, and battlefield innovations — creating a simultaneous platform for potential defence export and technology-transfer discussions
💭 Think About This

PRAGATI 2026 uniquely combines live military training with an Aatmanirbhar Bharat defence industry exposition co-organised with FICCI. This is deliberate: partner nations watching Indian-made weapons and surveillance systems in action are also potential buyers. How does this dual-purpose design advance India’s defence export ambitions alongside its security diplomacy goals?

⚖️ Strategic Context: Neighbourhood First, Act East, and SAGAR

PRAGATI 2026 is the product of several converging strands of Indian strategic policy:

  • Neighbourhood First Policy: Prioritises deep security, economic, and people-to-people linkages with India’s immediate neighbours (Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka all participating)
  • Act East Policy: Launched by PM Narendra Modi in 2014 as a strategic upgrade of the earlier Look East Policy; deepens India’s engagement with ASEAN nations across defence, trade, and connectivity
  • SAGAR Doctrine: Security and Growth for All in the Region — India as the net security provider and first responder in the IOR

The exercise also reflects India’s positioning as a Preferred Security Partner in the IOR — as China’s naval presence in the Indian Ocean has expanded through port infrastructure in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Myanmar, and Bangladesh. For ASEAN nations navigating major-power competition, India’s PRAGATI platform offers multilateral engagement without the explicit alliance frameworks that complicate their ties with the US or China.

Key defence diplomacy milestones that contextualise PRAGATI: India’s first India-ASEAN maritime exercise (2023); Defence Minister Rajnath Singh addressed the 12th ADMM-Plus in Kuala Lumpur (November 2025); India appointed Defence Attachés in several Asian countries in 2024. PRAGATI adds a dedicated army-level exercise to this architecture.

🌐 Comparison with Other Indian Multilateral Exercises

India conducts several multilateral military exercises, each with a distinct focus:

Exercise Service Focus Key Feature
PRAGATI Army CT/CI, HADR, IOR land forces First multilateral army exercise for IOR; co-located defence expo
MILAN Navy Naval interoperability 50+ nations; Andaman & Nicobar Islands
Malabar Navy High-end naval warfare Quad partners: India, US, Japan, Australia
Sanyukt Vimochan Army Multilateral HADR Disaster relief focused
Tasman Saber Navy / Joint Combined warfighting India-Australia-US
✓ Quick Recall: PRAGATI’s Unique Niche

PRAGATI is India’s first dedicated multilateral land forces exercise specifically for the IOR and ASEAN neighbourhood. Before PRAGATI, India had MILAN (Navy’s multilateral), but no standing multilateral army exercise in this format. The first India-ASEAN multilateral exercise at sea was conducted in 2023; PRAGATI (2026) does the same for land forces.

🧠 Memory Tricks
PRAGATI Full Form — “PR-AG-AT-I”:
Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth And Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region. The word also means “progress” in Hindi — forward motion in regional security.
12 FFCs — “7 ASEAN + 4 South Asia + 1 Island”:
7 ASEAN nations + 4 South Asian neighbours (Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka) + 1 Western Indian Ocean island (Seychelles) = 12 FFCs. Think: “7-4-1 = 12.”
Act East vs. Look East:
Look East Policy → rebranded as Act East Policy by PM Modi in 2014. “Look” was passive; “Act” signals active engagement. PRAGATI is the army-level action under Act East.
India’s Multilateral Exercise Tripod — “PRAGATI-MILAN-Sanyukt”:
PRAGATI = Army, IOR land forces. MILAN = Navy, 50+ nations. Sanyukt Vimochan = Army, HADR. Three pillars — land combat, naval interoperability, and disaster relief.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What does PRAGATI stand for, and what does the word mean in Hindi?
Click to flip
Answer
Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region. In Hindi, pragati means “progress.”
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

🌏
PRAGATI 2026 is dominated by ASEAN nations. Does India’s Act East Policy represent a genuine strategic pivot toward Southeast Asia, or is it primarily a reactive posture to counter China’s growing influence in the IOR?
Consider: India’s trade and connectivity projects with ASEAN (Kaladan Multimodal, India-Myanmar-Thailand Highway); China’s Belt and Road projects in the same region; ASEAN’s centrality principle; whether India can be a credible alternative to China as a security provider.
⚔️
PRAGATI uniquely pairs military training with a defence industry exposition. Does this blurring of military cooperation and commercial defence export represent a strength of Indian foreign policy, or does it risk commercialising security partnerships?
Think about: US and France doing the same at DSEI and Euronaval; India’s defence export targets ($5 billion by 2025); smaller IOR nations lacking domestic defence industries; whether defence sales deepen or complicate security relationships.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
What does the acronym PRAGATI stand for in the context of the 2026 Indian Army exercise?
A) Preparedness of Regional Armies for Growth and Training Internationally
B) Programme for Regional Army Growth and Tactical Integration
C) Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region
D) Platform for Regional Armed Forces Growth and Training Initiative
Explanation

PRAGATI stands for Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region. It is the Indian Army’s maiden multilateral exercise for the IOR, hosted at FTN Umroi, Meghalaya in May 2026.

Question 2 of 5
How many nations participated in PRAGATI 2026, and how many were friendly foreign countries (FFCs)?
A) 12 total; 11 FFCs
B) 13 total; 12 FFCs
C) 15 total; 14 FFCs
D) 10 total; 9 FFCs
Explanation

India invited 12 friendly foreign countries (FFCs), making 13 participating nations in total. The 12 FFCs span ASEAN (7 nations), South Asia (4), and the Western Indian Ocean (Seychelles).

Question 3 of 5
At which location was Exercise PRAGATI 2026 conducted?
A) Suhelwa Military Station, Uttar Pradesh
B) Belgaum Military Station, Karnataka
C) Port Blair, Andaman & Nicobar Islands
D) FTN Umroi Military Station, near Shillong, Meghalaya
Explanation

The inaugural PRAGATI 2026 was held at the Foreign Training Node (FTN), Umroi Military Station, near Shillong, Meghalaya, hosted by the Indian Army’s Eastern Command.

Question 4 of 5
India’s Act East Policy was launched in which year, and as an upgrade of which earlier policy?
A) 2014; rebranding of Look East Policy
B) 2016; rebranding of Look East Policy
C) 2014; rebranding of Neighbourhood First Policy
D) 2019; rebranding of Indo-Pacific Policy
Explanation

The Act East Policy was launched by PM Narendra Modi in 2014 as a strategic upgrade of the earlier Look East Policy (in place since 1991), aimed at deepening engagement with ASEAN across defence, trade, and connectivity.

Question 5 of 5
Which statement correctly distinguishes PRAGATI 2026 from India’s MILAN exercise?
A) MILAN is an army exercise; PRAGATI is a naval exercise
B) MILAN focuses on CT/CI; PRAGATI focuses on naval interoperability
C) MILAN is a multilateral naval exercise; PRAGATI is India’s first multilateral land forces exercise for the IOR
D) Both are naval exercises but MILAN is bilateral while PRAGATI is multilateral
Explanation

MILAN is India’s multilateral naval exercise (hosted by the Indian Navy at Andaman & Nicobar, 50+ nations). PRAGATI (2026) is the first dedicated multilateral land forces exercise for the IOR region, hosted by the Indian Army at Meghalaya.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
Full Form & Meaning: PRAGATI = Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region. Also means “progress” in Hindi. Inaugural edition: 18–31 May 2026.
2
Participants: India + 12 FFCs = 13 nations. FFCs: Bhutan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Seychelles, Sri Lanka, Vietnam. 7 are ASEAN nations; 4 are South Asian; 1 is Western Indian Ocean (Seychelles).
3
Venue: Foreign Training Node (FTN), Umroi Military Station, near Shillong, Meghalaya. Hosted by Indian Army’s Eastern Command. Previously hosted Nomadic Elephant (India–Mongolia), KazInd (India–Kazakhstan), Vajra Prahar (India–USA).
4
Focus Areas: CT/CI drills in jungle/semi-mountainous terrain; joint command planning; intelligence synchronisation; HADR; Aatmanirbhar Bharat defence exposition co-organised with FICCI.
5
Policy Linkages: Neighbourhood First Policy + Act East Policy (launched 2014; upgrade of Look East Policy) + SAGAR doctrine. PRAGATI is the first dedicated multilateral land forces exercise for the IOR — fills the gap MILAN (Navy) covers for sea.
6
Regional Frameworks: PRAGATI complements India’s membership in ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), ADMM-Plus, East Asia Summit (EAS), IORA, and Quad. First India-ASEAN maritime exercise was 2023; PRAGATI 2026 extends this to land forces.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is Exercise PRAGATI and why was it launched in 2026?
PRAGATI (Partnership of Regional Armies for Growth and Transformation in the Indian Ocean Region) is a new annual multilateral military exercise hosted by the Indian Army, designed to build coalition capability, exchange battlefield experience, and develop joint response mechanisms among IOR armies. It was launched in 2026 to fill a structural gap — India had MILAN for multilateral naval engagement, but no equivalent standing platform for land forces cooperation with its IOR and ASEAN neighbours.
Why was Meghalaya chosen as the venue for PRAGATI 2026?
Meghalaya’s FTN Umroi was chosen for three reasons: (1) terrain — dense jungle and semi-mountainous features mirror the operational environments of many ASEAN participants; (2) location — Northeast India is the land bridge to Southeast Asia via Myanmar, reinforcing the Act East Policy; (3) institutional readiness — Umroi has hosted multiple bilateral exercises (Nomadic Elephant, KazInd, Vajra Prahar) and has the infrastructure for international military training.
How is PRAGATI different from MILAN?
MILAN is a multilateral naval exercise hosted by the Indian Navy at the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, with 50+ participating nations and a focus on maritime interoperability. PRAGATI is a multilateral land forces exercise hosted by the Indian Army at Meghalaya, focused on counter-terrorism, jungle warfare, HADR, and intelligence synchronisation among IOR armies. PRAGATI fills the army-level gap that MILAN covers at sea.
What is the significance of FICCI co-organising a defence exposition alongside PRAGATI?
The co-location of an Aatmanirbhar Bharat defence industry exposition with PRAGATI serves a dual purpose. First, it showcases India’s indigenous defence manufacturing capability (weapons, surveillance systems, tactical equipment) to 12 partner nations simultaneously. Second, it creates a platform for defence export discussions and technology-transfer negotiations. This directly supports India’s defence export targets under Aatmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India, while deepening economic dimensions of security partnerships beyond military-to-military ties.
Which key multilateral forums and frameworks does PRAGATI complement?
PRAGATI complements India’s participation in the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), the ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting-Plus (ADMM-Plus), the East Asia Summit (EAS), the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), and the Quad. It specifically adds an army-level multilateral exercise dimension to India’s IOR security architecture — a component that previously existed only at the naval level (MILAN) and disaster relief level (Sanyukt Vimochan).
🏷️ Exam Relevance
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains (GS-II) UPSC Mains (GS-III) SSC CGL Banking PO NDA / CDS State PSC CAT/MBA GDPI
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