India Cancels NOTAM Again! Is This a Tactic to Mock China’s Spy Ships?
by TFI Desk · TFIPOST.com
A Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) is a formal advisory issued by civil or military aviation authorities that alerts pilots and operators to temporary changes or hazards affecting airspace.
These can range from no-fly zones for missile tests to airspace closures during exercises or emergencies. In strategic contexts, NOTAMs also signal activity on the ground, sea, or air that may have defence implications.
In recent months, a curious pattern has emerged wherein India has repeatedly issued NOTAMs for large restricted areas and then scrapped them at short notice—prompting speculation that New Delhi’s manoeuvres may have a deeper strategic message, particularly toward China.
Timeline: India’s Recent NOTAM Issuances and Cancellations
On 1 December 2025, India issued a large-area NOTAM for a suspected long-range missile test covering a vast corridor in the Bay of Bengal, with the activity window set for 1–4 December. The scale of the exclusion zone—stretching deep into the eastern Indian Ocean—immediately attracted attention. The NOTAM was later cancelled, marking the first abrupt withdrawal in this sequence.
On 2 December 2025, a fresh NOTAM was issued for a sea-launched missile test off the Visakhapatnam coast, establishing a danger zone of approximately 1,480 km, with the test window fixed for 11 December 2025. According to Damien Symon, this corridor aligned with previous long-range strategic test profiles.
On 3–6 December 2025, India simultaneously issued a separate NOTAM for an Indian Air Force exercise along the western sector near the Pakistan border, indicating heightened military activity on multiple fronts during the same week.
Early December (exact dates revised) earlier NOTAMs linked to long-range missile tests off Visakhapatnam (initially planned for 1–4 December) were scrapped or superseded, reinforcing the pattern of issue-and-withdraw.
Mid-December Update – The 11 December missile-test NOTAM was not executed as originally planned, and the restricted airspace notification was effectively rendered redundant through non-activation.
17–20 December 2025 – India then issued a significantly expanded NOTAM, creating an even larger no-fly/no-sail zone—up to ~2,520 km in length—across the Bay of Bengal, suggesting preparation for a longer-range or higher-altitude strategic test. This notice replaced earlier ones and became the most extensive exclusion zone of the month.
Pattern of Issuance and Cancellation
Analysts and defence observers have documented a series of NOTAMs issued then withdrawn or postponed during the past year, often in connection with missile tests or major exercises.
Earlier in 2025, India had issued NOTAMs for Bay of Bengal test corridors only to see them later postponed. Social media defence communities have noted repeated cancellations tied to missile test windows, suggesting a pattern of India adjusting notices after foreign naval activity is tracked.
Taken together, these events have created a narrative—both in public fora and among defence watchers—that New Delhi may be playing a strategic game of cat-and-mouse rather than simply managing routine tests.
Is This About Chinese Spy Ships? The Strategic Angle
Chinese “Research” Vessels in the Indian Ocean
Multiple reports confirm that Chinese dual-use research and surveillance ships have been operating in or near the Indian Ocean Region (IOR). These vessels, while ostensibly civilian, are equipped with sophisticated sensors capable of tracking missile trajectories, undersea acoustics, and other strategic data.
One French maritime intelligence report also noted a Chinese vessel switching off its automatic identification transponder (AIS) near India’s maritime zones—indicating a clandestine presence that raised naval and strategic concern.
Another recent media account listed multiple Chinese surveillance vessels near the IOR, coinciding with planned Indian missile test schedules.
India’s Official Response
India’s Chief of Naval Staff, Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi, has publicly dismissed the idea that missile tests were postponed because of Chinese spy vessels as “a figment of imagination” or a narrative being circulated without basis. He acknowledged that India monitors foreign vessels but stressed that such activity is normal maritime practice and not a trigger for test postponement.
That said, Indian defence observers note that China’s surveillance presence is not accidental—Beijing has strategic interests in tracking missile tests and understanding radar, trajectory, and splashdown data, which could provide insight into India’s deterrent capability.
Could Repeated NOTAM Cancellations Be a Message?
Among defence analysts and strategic observers, India’s recent pattern of issuing and then cancelling NOTAMs has sparked a wider debate– are these withdrawals merely operational adjustments, or do they represent a calculated message aimed at foreign intelligence watchers—particularly China?
One prevailing interpretation is that India may be denying intelligence windfalls to adversaries. If Chinese “research” or surveillance vessels are actively monitoring missile test corridors in the Indian Ocean, withdrawing or rescheduling NOTAMs could be a deliberate move to prevent the collection of sensitive telemetry, radar signatures, or trajectory data.
In this reading, postponement does not signal hesitation or technological uncertainty. Rather, it reflects a mature strategic calculus—India will test its systems on its own terms and timetable, not when adversaries are optimally positioned to observe. The NOTAM, in this sense, becomes more than a procedural aviation notice; it becomes a signal of capability without disclosure of intent.
A second interpretation views the repeated issue-and-cancel cycle as a form of psychological or strategic play. By demonstrating the ability to repeatedly activate and deactivate test windows, India signals clear awareness of foreign surveillance and its own capacity to control tempo and escalation.
Whether this amounts to deliberate “mocking” is debatable, but the underlying message is unmistakable: India will not be rushed into action while being watched. At the same time, these manoeuvres reaffirm that India’s deterrence architecture continues to evolve—methodically, confidently, and without compulsion.
A third and equally compelling explanation is that NOTAMs are now serving as multi-layered messaging tools. Domestically, they reassure audiences of India’s preparedness and technological readiness. Regionally, they reinforce deterrence—particularly toward China and Pakistan—by underlining India’s long-range strike capabilities.
Internationally, they signal to allies and strategic partners that New Delhi is an active and calculating player in the Indo-Pacific security landscape. Viewed through this prism, the issuance and withdrawal of NOTAMs appear less random and more like part of a broader strategic communication ecosystem.
Looking ahead, India’s evolving NOTAM behaviour highlights the complex interplay between strategic restraint, great-power competition, and modern surveillance technologies.
Whether these cancellations are intended to frustrate foreign intelligence collection—especially by Chinese maritime surveillance platforms—or simply reflect operational prudence, their strategic impact is undeniable. NOTAMs are no longer just tools of aviation safety; they have become instruments of signalling and deterrence.
As China’s intelligence presence in the Indian Ocean continues to expand, it is likely to influence how India schedules and conducts future missile tests. Observers will therefore closely watch upcoming announcements, withdrawals, and eventual test firings—not merely for what they reveal technologically, but for what they signal strategically.