The peace at the border is to a large extent dependent on how well a country is prepared to retaliate attacks. It may seem like irony, but strategic assets like nuclear bombs and ballistic missiles, which can wreak havoc if used, are developed to serve as deterrents.

If the ability of a country to strike back is key in the current geopolitical situation, then the capability to defend against the incoming aerial attacks is equally important. The purchase of S-400 air defence systems from Russia would not only help India to thwart incoming aerial threats like cruise missiles, UAVs, helicopters etc, but it will allow India to combine it with existing defence mechanism and come up with a multi-layered air defence system.

India is already working on two-tier Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) Program and has Akash Missiles to take on aerial attacks. The S-400 Triumph missile defence system is a significant strategic upgrade in India's military hardware. In fact India badly needed such a system given the hostile surroundings and growing capabilities of China and Pakistan.

Defence and strategic matters expert Major General PK Sehgal told OneIndia that India's air defence capabilities badly needed an upgrade. He said S-400 deal was the need of the hour given the growing threats from China and Pakistan.

"Given its (S-400 Triumf) powerful radars which can pick up any movement in the air up to a distance of 600 km. Any aircraft taking off from its (Pakistan's) airfields can be picked up by us and we can knock it down before it comes anywhere near the border. This is one system which can track more than 300 aerial objects concurrently and can destroy up to 30 of them. It can prioritise which is more threatening and take appropriate action. It also gives you the capability of overlapping air defence systems," he said.

"We did not have anything (in terms of air defence) between 400 km and 25 km. This is a system which can take on the enemy from 30 km to 400 km. Then you are also buying Israeli Barack 8 systems which has a range of 70 km extendable up to 100 km. So, you will have a layered air defence to take take on threats from China and Pakistan," said Major General PK Sehgal.

The system if deployed along Pakistan border will provide India an edge of 600 km radar coverage with option of shooting down incoming aircraft from 400 km from its territory. The system has a multi-function radar, autonomous detection and targeting systems, anti-aircraft missile systems, launchers besides a command and control centre.