Yeah, let me know when China stops getting frustrated over creating an engine. Where are your Chinese friends by the way?
Well hundreds of Chinese warplanes are now flying with WS-10A powerplant.
In this forum, there is now a general consensus that the J-20 production planes are using an upgraded WS-10X engine. So looks like the Chinese are slowly getting there.
You know that the powerplant for the Z-10 attack helicopter is pure Chinese?
You'd get into trouble for doing business with Iran.
True that but I am thinking more in the long term up to 2030. Who knows what the situation may be in 5 years time.
We have WB, IFC and literally thousands of financial institutions for low interest loans. I work at a bank dealing with trade loans, so I do know what I'm talking about. There's nothing special about Chinese loans. They are just....loans...it doesn't necessarily give us any distinct edge when it comes to national development.
Biggest source of export proceeds is Europe, not China (but they are a big supplier of fabrics and yarn). The biggest consumer market is the US which we aren't fully utilizing. China doesn't go nowhere near that level. On the weapons part, it may have some credibility, but what of the enemy? We don't know what they have been armed with or what they are planning to do.
We aren't that poor you know.
We are not China's client state, and never will be. And neither should we be that of India's. The price paid by the Myanmar citizen was a steep one.
If it was that easy, then there would be no need to go to China would it then?
China has promised 24 billion US dollars of low interest loans. Some of the loans already agreed come with a 5 year grace period. Tell me which commercial bank would give BD those terms?
24 billion US dollars is the total tax intake for BD government for the whole year and so is not an insignigicant sum.
Who else apart from China is raising their imports from BD by 30% a year? From around 150 million US dollars in 2010, it is now around the 1 billion US dollar mark. In a decade it may hit 10 US billion dollars as long as BD does not become hostile to China. Developed markets like the US and EU are saturated and so only China can help BD exports rise in a big way. BD should not turn away from a soon to be(~10 years) developed market of 1.4 billion consumers.
BD is already getting ToT from China to manufacture small warships and SAMs such as the FN-16 manpad. There were reports a couple of months ago that BD will work in partnership with China to create a next-gen frigate. These are tangible technology transfers that China is providing BD that will help it eventually become self-sufficient or part sufficient in armaments. No other country can or will provide this currently.
You are British are you not? Why not use your power to raise your concern and help? It doesn't take a lot of money. Take the initiative, work with Bangladeshis be they businessmen or politicians (even if you may not personally like them) instead of letting a greedy snake do it for you. Let the ball keep bouncing.
UK is at the forefront of voicing it's condemnation about the genocidal Myanmarese at the UN. There is nothing much that can be done by the UK since it is BD itself that is the problem here.
By the laws of nature. BD should be inherently a more powerful country that Myanmar with a GDP of 3.5 times that of Myanmar.
Pathetic Hasina even refused to sit with BNP recently at some international forum(maybe UN) saying that BD has all the allies it needs anyway and won't sit with killers(BNP).
When Khaleda came into power she decomissioned the Bangabhandu frigate and tried to sell off the 8 Mig-29s saying they were not necessary for the defence of BD and too expensive, and she would buy more modern fighters. What did the half-wit Khaleda do? She brought F-7s from China at a time when Myanmar was buying squadron after squadron of Mig-29s armed with the deadly R-77.
I am sorry if anyone is offended but unless BD is serious about building a military that can dominate Myanmar, then we can expect the savages next door to eventually push all their Rohingya into BD.
Agreed. But from who should we source the weapons from? Can we trust the current suppliers? Even if we spend money on arms, it won't necessarily give us an edge against them.
For example, if we buy 8 MiG-35's (one of the very likely contenders in our combat aircraft tender), they'll buy twice as many. They are now interested in the MiG-35 as we speak. By the time the PAK-FA matures for mass production sometime in 2020-2025-ish timeline, they will undoubtedly be offered such.
BD has GDP 3.5x that of Myanmar. Even a slight increase in BD defence spending to 2% will mean that Myanmar will have to eat arms again to match BD.
It is ridiculous that BD is comparing itself to a tiny country ethnic-strife torn entity like Myanmar.