Pakistan’s success with the JF-17—developed jointly with China and co-produced by the two countries— also comes even as India is trying to export the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) Tejas manufactured by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), but no talks have borne fruit as yet.
The acquisition of the JF-17s was announced by Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Iran, Ali Alizada, in a post on X Wednesday. Alizada has also served as envoy to Pakistan.
On that day, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev inspected a JF-17C (Block III) aircraft at capital Baku’s Heydar Aliyev International Airport, where it was showcased as part of a defence exhibition. Aliyev was accompanied by Defence Minister Zakir Hasanov and senior Pakistani military officials.
Pakistan and Azerbaijan inked the $1.6-billion deal in February. Under the agreement, Azerbaijan will receive eight JF-17C Block-III aircraft from Pakistan besides ammunition. This will include the air-to-surface missiles.
The lightweight and multirole JF-17C fighter jets are co-produced by Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) and the China Aviation Industry Corporation (AVIC). They have air-to-air and air-to-ground combat capabilities and high manoeuvrability at medium and low altitudes, as described in a report by Türkiye Today.
Pakistan has previously exported JF-17s to Myanmar and Nigeria, and there have also been reports that Iraq may purchase the fighters.
In Myanmar, however, the fighters—acquired between 2019 and 2021 following an agreement signed in 2016—were declared unfit last year, prompting its military junta to send a “stern message” to Islamabad. The Myanmar Air Force grounded the jets due to malfunctions and flaws, The Economic Times reported.
South Caucasus rivalry
Speaking at an event (the Global Armenian Summit) earlier this month, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had questioned why his country could not buy weapons from India if Azerbaijan could do so from Pakistan.
As reported by ThePrint in July, Armenian troops were spotted wearing an India-made helmet-mounted thermal imaging monocular manufactured by Bengaluru-based Tonbo Imaging.
Since then, Armenia has reached out to India for the procurement of Indian missiles, including the indigenous beyond-visual range Astra air-to-air missile, and to upgrade its Su-30 fighter aircraft fleet. As reported by ThePrint, talks are on and still at a nascent stage.
In 2022, India’s Kalyani Strategic Systems Limited (KSSL) won an export order for the supply of artillery guns to Armenia. Armenia has also bought the Pinaka rocket system from India.
Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s cooperation with Pakistan and Turkey has gathered significant steam. In July, the leaders of the three countries met in Astana on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
Islamabad’s defence ties with Baku go back to 2003, when the two countries signed a military agreement. Aliyev’s father and predecessor, Heydar Aliyev, had visited Pakistan earlier that year, while Pervez Musharraf, then president of Pakistan, returned the visit the following year.
Talks to export Tejas
During Aero India in Bengaluru last year, HAL chief managing director C.B. Ananthakrishnan had said that India was in talks with Malaysia, Argentina, Egypt and Botswana for the sale of the LCA Tejas.
HAL submitted a proposal to Malaysia’s Ministry of Defence to supply 18 Tejas aircraft in response to a global tender floated by the Royal Malaysian Air Force.
The Indian company, however, was unable to become the final contender and lost to South Korea’s Korean Aerospace Industries, which had on offer its FA-50. No other talks have fructified, either.
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