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Despite boasting advanced radar networks, proven interception capabilities, and successful induction into the Indian Armed Forces (where it is known as the "Abhra" system), the Medium Range Surface-to-Air Missile (MR-SAM) has encountered significant friction in the international arms market.
Co-developed by India's Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), the system's export hurdles are not tied to technical flaws.
Rather, they emerge from the complex realities of joint development, strategic industrial foresight, and fierce international competition.
The Israeli Bottleneck: Competing with a Partner
The primary hurdle for MR-SAM's global reach is the original technology partner itself.The MR-SAM is fundamentally a derivative of the Israeli Barak-8 missile ecosystem. While India and Israel collaborated heavily on the project, Israel retains independent export rights and aggressively markets the Barak family worldwide.
When sovereign buyers evaluate their options, purchasing directly from Israel often guarantees streamlined bureaucracies, established supply chains, and rapid delivery schedules.
Because Israel holds the critical intellectual property for key subsystems—including advanced electronics, seekers, and propulsion components—India finds itself in the paradoxical position of competing against its own co-developer for market share.
The Indigenization Gap
A critical misstep in the MR-SAM's lifecycle was the lack of early, aggressive indigenization.While the system was tailored for Indian military requirements, it never morphed into a distinctly "Indian" variant with 100% domestic content.
Without total control over the intellectual property, India lacks the autonomy needed to swiftly negotiate export deals, package systems, or customize them for foreign buyers without navigating complex approval processes.
Conversely, Israel enjoys the agility to price, package, and export its Barak systems seamlessly.
Ecosystem Maturity and Lifecycle Support
Selling a high-tier air defence system extends far beyond the interceptor missile itself.It mandates a comprehensive package encompassing:
- Command and control infrastructure
- Multi-function radar systems
- Specialized troop training
- Guaranteed lifecycle maintenance and long-term spare parts availability
India, meanwhile, is still in the nascent stages of proving its reliability as a long-term supplier of complex, high-maintenance strategic systems to foreign militaries.
South Korea’s Strategic Disruption: The Cheongung-II
As India grapples with these structural limitations, South Korea has aggressively seized the middle-tier air defence market with its Cheongung-II (KM-SAM Block II) system.Positioned as a highly effective alternative to the American Patriot system, the Cheongung-II has secured massive multi-billion dollar contracts across the Middle East.
Recent open-source data highlights major milestones for the South Korean system, including a $3.5 billion deal with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in 2022, followed by significant acquisitions by Saudi Arabia ($3.2 billion) and Iraq ($2.8 billion).
The system's credibility has surged globally following reports of an estimated 96% interception success rate during recent combat deployments against hostile aerial threats in the UAE.
The Economics of Interception
Cost efficiency gives South Korea a massive competitive advantage.- Cheongung-II: Approximately $1.1 million per interceptor.
- Patriot PAC-3: Approximately $3.7 million per interceptor.
A Coordinated Industrial Strategy
The South Korean export boom is driven by a highly synchronized defence-industrial base.Conglomerates such as LIG Nex1, Hanwha Systems, and Hanwha Aerospace work in tandem under a government-backed framework designed specifically for rapid production and aggressive global marketing.
Their soaring stock valuations reflect immense investor confidence in this unified, export-oriented model.
India’s Path Forward
India’s current defence export framework is still undergoing a transition.Historically, high-end programs like the MR-SAM were conceptualized strictly to meet domestic security requirements, treating international sales as a secondary objective.
This approach has inevitably created blind spots in competitive pricing, international marketing, and post-sale support networks.
The challenges surrounding the MR-SAM highlight a vital lesson for India's defence manufacturing sector.
While international joint ventures are excellent vehicles for acquiring advanced technology, they inherently cap export potential unless paired with a strict roadmap for total indigenization.
To capture a larger share of the global arms market, India must pivot toward a dual-track strategy: continue leveraging global partnerships for technological leaps, while simultaneously developing 100% indigenous platforms from the ground up to ensure absolute ownership, competitive pricing, and a design philosophy that prioritizes global exports from day one.