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Beijing Banned Export of Its New Stealth Fighter

Pichkari

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Policy bars sale of the J-20 to China’s allies

The Chinese government reportedly will not sell the new J-20—China’s first stealth fighter—to foreign countries. Not coincidentally, the United States adopted a similar policy regarding its own F-22 stealth fighter.
The revelation of the apparent export ban comes as a surprise. Since the Chengdu-built J-20’s 2011 debut, Western analysts have assumed the large, angular, twin-engine fighter would, like most Chinese weapons, become an export commodity.

Instead, it seems Beijing wants to keep the J-20’s high-end military capabilities all to itself. Cash isn’t worth giving up the radar-evading warplane’s secrets.

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Song Zhongping, a former officer in Beijing’s strategic missile force, revealed the export ban in a December interview with China’s Phoenix TV news program.

“The export of advanced Chinese military technology is prohibited,” Song said. “This is in order to keep J-20’s fifth-generation technology out of hostile hands.”

That’s the same rationale the U.S. Congress cited when it formally outlawed sales of the F-22 stealth fighter in the mid-2000s. Prior to that, Japan had asked to acquire F-22s.

But Tokyo has been an occasionally unreliable friend to the U.S. when it comes to secret technology. In 2007, Japanese authorities caught a Japanese navy petty officer apparently trying to pass to China information on the U.S.-made Aegis radar.

What’s ironic about China’s J-20 sales-restriction is that many observers strongly suspect Beijing’s engineers derived the plane’s design in part from data that Chinese hackers have stolen from the American-led F-35 stealth fighter program.

The U.S. expressly designed the F-35 to be safely exportable. The F-35 is smaller, slower and less stealthy than the F-22. But it still includes sensitive technologies including sophisticated sensors and radar-absorbing coatings.
In any event, Song describes the J-20 restriction as directly connected to the F-22 prohibition. “If one day the United States decides to export the F-22, China might consider lifting its ban, as well,” he said.

His reasoning seems to be that if America’s allies possessed F-22s, China’s allies would need J-20s to balance them. And with the F-22 proliferating, its secrets would proliferate, too—obviating any need to similarly limit the spread of the J-20’s presumably similar technology.

Song doesn’t seem to appreciate that F-22 production ended nearly three years ago—and no one in Congress, the White House or the Pentagon has made a serious effort to restart it.



There is other evidence that China intends to keep the J-20 all to itself. Shortly after the J-20’s debut, the rival Shenyang Aircraft Corporation unveiled its smaller FC-31 stealth fighter prototype.
Unlike the government-sponsored J-20, the FC-31 is strictly a private venture that Shenyang intends to sell abroad. Pakistan has expressed interest.

The FC-31 represents Beijing’s opportunity to compete in the lucrative world market for radar-evading fighters. If the sensitive J-20 is like America’s F-22, then the commoditized FC-31 is analogous to the U.S. F-35.

The J-20’s development is accelerating. There are five prototypes in testing—each successive copy possessing big improvements over its predecessors. The Chinese air force could begin receiving copies for front-line use as early as 2017—12 years after the F-22 entered service.

Blog link : Beijing Banned Export of Its New Stealth Fighter — War Is Boring — Medium
 
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I always thought the ban on the export of F-22s was more down to the US trying to keep the flaws of their top of the line fighter unknown to their enemies and not about keeping the secrets of the tech intact because that can be done in other ways (end user agreements and such). I would suspect this is even more true for the J-20's export ban and fair enough- the J-20 is a formidable deterrent (on paper) and a very effective propaganda tool.
 
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So it will have same russian engine (advanced version) that Pakistan using in JF17.
 
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There's NO BAN coz BeiJing never said China will export J-20 to any foreign nation ... U.S won't sell F-22, China won't export J-20 it only designed for PLAAF.

T-50 / F-35 / FC-31 for sell ...
 
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Pakistan was dreaming to get it...sorry Pakistan
nopes we weren't. we never expressed the interest for the J-20 program, its older than the J-31 program but since J-31 fits our needs, we expressed our interests.
 
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nopes we weren't. we never expressed the interest for the J-20 program, its older than the J-31 program but since J-31 fits our needs, we expressed our interests.
if you cannot get J-20...how do you think you will get J31
 
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I always thought the ban on the export of F-22s was more down to the US trying to keep the flaws of their top of the line fighter unknown to their enemies and not about keeping the secrets of the tech intact because that can be done in other ways (end user agreements and such). I would suspect this is even more true for the J-20's export ban and fair enough- the J-20 is a formidable deterrent (on paper) and a very effective propaganda tool.

Really, that's your reading of why China isn't exporting the J20, because it's flawed and they want to hide that flaw! You guys will try anything to denigrate the chinese tech...LOL. Yet India is years if not decades away from anything half as comparable.
 
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why would Pakistan want something designed for PLAAF when there is something else designed just for PAF?

besides, we like to keep our flaws to ourselves.
 
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This article is ridiculous. Most of our home-used products are not for export, or have at least more than 5 years lag.
 
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Pakistani pilots were the only ones invited to visit the J-20...It might be a future purchase for PAF to counter the PAK-FA.
FC-31 will counter the Rafale. This one will have a custom made version for PAF, for up to 50 stealth fighters in the medium term and more in the long term.
I won't be surprised if Pakistan gets a special waver concerning the J-20, as it economy and ties with China strengthen to a certain mutually desired level. All the economic assistance Pakistan is getting now for its infrastructure and energy sector tends towards that. This is a strategic partnership, and the J-20 is a strategic stealth fighter, this is what compels me to believe that Pakistan will get it in the future.
 
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No other countries can get F-22 so how will Western countries or Japan lay their hands on F-35 :crazy:
 
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