Over the past decade, India’s global engagement has undergone a quiet yet consequential transformation. Beyond diplomacy, trade negotiations or strategic alignments, New Delhi has increasingly come to be seen as a dependable responder in moments of humanitarian crisis. This role has not emerged accidentally, nor is it merely symbolic. It reflects a deliberate shift in how India views its responsibilities in a world marked by frequent natural disasters, climate-driven emergencies and fragile civilian infrastructures. Central to this shift is the Modi government’s articulation of the Vishwamitra philosophy, India as a “friend of the world,” an idea rooted in civilisational values but operationalised through state capacity and institutional preparedness.
The Vishwamitra outlook emphasises responsibility without dominance, assistance without conditions and solidarity without political intrusion. What was once perceived as moral posturing has, over time, been translated into sustained and measurable action. India has repeatedly stepped in during major disasters across regions, often within hours of a crisis unfolding. These interventions have ranged from immediate search-and-rescue missions to longer-term stabilisation efforts involving healthcare, infrastructure repair and logistical support. Collectively, they signal a recalibration of India’s external engagement—one that blends compassion with capability.
This policy evolution is most visible in the way India’s humanitarian outreach has been institutionalised through structured Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) missions. Earlier relief efforts were often reactive, limited in scope and dependent on ad hoc coordination. Over the past decade, however, HADR has become an organised pillar of India’s foreign and security policy. Relief operations are now backed by clear political direction, inter-ministerial coordination, pre-positioned resources and military preparedness. The emphasis has remained on speed, precision and utility rather than optics or scale. Indian missions typically deploy integrated teams comprising doctors, engineers, aviation units, communication specialists and mobile infrastructure, allowing them to function independently in high-stress environments.
This approach has steadily earned India a reputation as a reliable, non-intrusive and effective responder. Countries across South Asia, the Indo-Pacific, West Asia and Southeast Asia increasingly view India as a partner that delivers practical help without political strings attached. Unlike traditional models of humanitarian intervention that are sometimes accompanied by strategic leverage or prolonged presence, India’s model has focused on immediate need, local coordination and timely withdrawal once stability is restored. This restraint has strengthened trust and reinforced India’s image as a responsible regional and global actor.
At the centre of this evolving humanitarian architecture stands the Indian Army. While multiple agencies contribute to disaster response, the Army’s role has expanded far beyond its conventional military mandate. Its ability to mobilise rapidly, operate in hostile or inaccessible terrain and integrate medical, engineering and aviation capabilities has made it indispensable to India’s humanitarian profile. The Army’s organisational structure allows it to deploy self-contained units that can function even when local civilian systems are overwhelmed or paralysed. Whether it is reopening washed-out roads, conducting life-saving surgeries in makeshift hospitals or evacuating stranded civilians from disaster zones, the Army has consistently delivered under intense pressure.
The modern phase of India’s humanitarian engagement found its defining moment in Operation Maitri in 2015. On April 25 that year, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, flattening entire districts and paralysing the Kathmandu Valley. India responded within hours, launching one of its largest overseas disaster-relief missions. The scale and speed of the response marked a departure from earlier practices. Indian armed forces flew 2,223 sorties, evacuated around 11,200 people and transported nearly 1,700 tonnes of relief material into Nepal. Indian Army medical teams treated 4,762 injured persons, performed 300 surgeries and managed thousands of outpatient cases in some of the worst-hit areas.
Engineering units constructed 55 temporary shelters for displaced families, while Army Aviation helicopters reached remote and landslide-hit regions such as Barpak, Lamabagar and Dhading that had been completely cut off. For the first time, India emerged as the first international rescue team on the ground in a major disaster. The operation brought global recognition to India’s disaster-response capacity and demonstrated how military preparedness could be aligned with humanitarian objectives without provoking regional sensitivities.
Subsequent missions reinforced and expanded this reputation. In 2018, when earthquakes and a tsunami struck Indonesia’s Central Sulawesi province, India launched Operation Samudra Maitri. Indian Army medical and engineering teams were deployed to Palu and Sigi, where they treated crush injuries, infections and dehydration, cleared debris and helped restore fractured road networks. Relief material was transported through coordinated air and sea routes, but it was the Army’s on-ground presence that ensured assistance translated into immediate care and access for survivors. The mission underlined India’s growing willingness to extend humanitarian support beyond its immediate neighbourhood.
In 2023, Operation Dost took India’s humanitarian outreach into even more complex geopolitical terrain. The twin earthquakes that devastated large parts of Türkiye and Syria posed not just logistical challenges but also diplomatic sensitivities. India responded decisively. Within hours, the Indian Army established a 30-bed field hospital in Hatay, staffed by 99 personnel including surgeons, orthopaedic specialists, anaesthetists and paramedics. Over the course of the mission, the hospital treated 3,604 patients, performing complex surgeries and providing critical care to children, the elderly and those pulled from rubble after prolonged entrapment.
India also sent relief supplies to Syria despite international sanctions, prompting questions about legal and political constraints. Indian officials clarified that humanitarian assistance is not restricted by sanctions, aligning the mission with India’s G20 ethos of “One Earth, One Family, One Future.” Turkish authorities publicly acknowledged India as one of the earliest and most effective responders, reinforcing the perception that India’s humanitarian actions were driven by need rather than alignment.
This momentum carried forward into 2025 with Operation Brahma in Myanmar. A powerful earthquake killed over 2,000 people, overwhelming local capacities. India responded with a comprehensive package of assistance, delivering approximately 750 metric tonnes of relief supplies, including foodgrain, medicines, tents, generators and rapidly deployable surgical shelters. A 127-member Indian Army field hospital team was deployed, offering emergency surgeries, orthopaedic interventions and maternal care. The operation demonstrated how India’s humanitarian doctrine had matured into a repeatable, scalable model that could be activated swiftly across borders.
Later that year, Cyclone Ditwah devastated Sri Lanka’s eastern and central regions, prompting India to launch Operation Sagar Bandhu. Acting as the first responder under its Neighbourhood First policy, India delivered more than 1,000 tonnes of relief material through a combination of airlifts and naval sealifts. The Indian Army’s modular field hospitals treated thousands, while trauma-care systems under the Aarogya Maitri initiative were deployed alongside training for local medical personnel. Army engineers installed Bailey bridges to restore connectivity in landslide-hit districts, enabling sustained relief operations. The mission highlighted how humanitarian assistance often extends beyond immediate relief into stabilisation and recovery.
Parallel to these overseas commitments, the Indian Army has continued to shoulder an equally demanding humanitarian role at home. Climate change and extreme weather events have intensified floods, landslides and natural disasters across India, frequently overwhelming civilian infrastructure. During the Kerala floods of 2018, the Army deployed over 100 columns, conducted rooftop rescues across submerged districts, set up medical camps and constructed temporary bridges to restore access. In 2025, persistent monsoon rains triggered floods and landslides across Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Jammu & Kashmir, with Army units conducting continuous rescue and relief operations under hazardous conditions.
In Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh the same year, torrential rains isolated hill districts and destroyed road connectivity. The Army and Assam Rifles delivered food, water and medicines to remote villages, evacuated vulnerable populations and, in Arunachal, used drones to deliver essential supplies where conventional access was impossible. These domestic operations underscore how technology, adaptability and accumulated experience are increasingly integrated into the Army’s disaster-response toolkit.
Taken together, these missions illustrate how the Modi era has brought clarity and coherence to India’s humanitarian posture. The Vishwamitra philosophy is no longer an abstract ideal but a guiding framework that shapes how India deploys its capabilities in times of crisis. The Indian Army, with its integrated structure and operational readiness, has become the primary instrument through which this vision is realised. It now stands not only as a fighting force tasked with national defence, but as India’s humanitarian vanguard, ready to respond swiftly, operate effectively and withdraw responsibly.
As climate-induced disasters grow more frequent across South Asia and beyond, India’s ability to act as a global first responder will increasingly shape its international standing. In moments of crisis, India’s message has become steadily clearer: it will show up, it will help, and it will deliver, guided by capability, restraint and an enduring sense of responsibility to the wider world.


















