What is it?
- Decoys are deception tools designed to mislead enemy sensors, surveillance, and weapons systems.
- They simulate the signature (radar, thermal, acoustic, or visual) of real assets like aircraft, tanks, or ships.
- They aim to confuse, divert, waste enemy munitions, and protect real platforms at relatively low cost.
Types of Decoys
- Airborne Decoys:
- Towed Decoys: e.g., Fibre-Optic Towed Decoy (FOTD) attached to aircraft to mislead radar-guided missiles.
- Unmanned Aerial Decoys (UADs): Low-cost drones mimicking fighter jets to saturate enemy air defences.
- Example: U.S. ADM-160 MALD (Miniature Air Launched Decoy).
- Land Warfare Decoys
- Dummy Tanks, Artillery, and Missiles: Inflatable or heat-emitting structures resembling real equipment.
- Electronic Warfare (EW) Decoys: Emit radar or radio signals to mislead enemy reconnaissance.
- Naval Decoys
- Chaff & Flares: Metal strips/flares launched by warships to divert radar or infrared-guided missiles.
- Active Decoy Launchers: Emit electromagnetic signatures of large ships.
- Example: U.S. Navy’s Nulka active missile decoy system.
- Cyber & Digital Decoys
- Honeypots: Cybersecurity decoys that lure hackers into false systems.
- False GPS Signals: Spoofing enemy navigation and drones.
- Directed Energy & AI-enabled Decoys
- Emerging use of AI algorithms to generate realistic, adaptive decoy signatures in real time.
- Integration with laser-based Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs) to create combined deception-and-defence systems.
India’s Deployment of Decoys
- Air Force: Rafale fighters equipped with X-Guard Fibre-Optic Towed Decoy (FOTD) developed by Rafael (Israel).
- Army: Dummy tanks/artillery during exercises to mislead enemy drones & satellites.
- Navy: Use of chaff & flare countermeasure systems against anti-ship missiles.
- DRDO: Working on indigenous electronic warfare suites and decoys integrated with QRSAM & IADWS (Integrated Air Defence Weapon System).
Strategic Importance
- Force Protection: Shields expensive platforms (jets, tanks, ships).
- Cost-Effectiveness: Low-cost decoys waste high-value enemy missiles.
- Psychological Impact: Creates uncertainty in enemy decision-making.
- Asymmetric Edge: Helps weaker forces counter technologically superior adversaries.
Challenges
- Advanced sensors (multi-spectral imaging, AI-driven recognition) can distinguish real from fake.
- Requires constant innovation to remain effective.
- Ethical concerns in cyber warfare decoys (honeypots, false civilian signals).