The Indian government confirmed GPS spoofing incidents affecting flights at several major airports including Kolkata, Amritsar, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, and Chennai. Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu told Parliament on December 1, 2025, that "some flights" near Delhi airport faced counterfeit GPS signals, causing false aircraft positions and misleading alerts. These spoofing events took place in early November and caused confusion among airline crews and air traffic controllers. The Airports Authority of India has asked the Wireless Monitoring Organisation to locate the source of interference. The WMO is increasing efforts to track down the spoofs using details from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation and AAI. Such GPS tampering has become common near India’s borders with Pakistan and Myanmar, often linked to counter-drone tactics. Following these issues, defense forces warned about possible GPS signal disruptions near Mumbai and Kolkata due to ongoing military exercises, including the Indian Air Force's Exercise MahaGujRaj-25 in the north-west. These exercises likely contributed to the spoofing events near Delhi. The government continues to investigate and take steps to secure GPS signals for aviation safety.