Bilal Khan (Quwa)
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The interest in the F-16 stems from the fact that the PAF already has the infrastructure to operate both the Block-15 A/B and the Block-52 C/D. It's a pragmatic look at how to quickly build-up a fleet, and, in a way, secure against the effect of sanctions by having more of the same fighter on hand (for storage as spares for parts and attrition).Beauty doesn't win the fight when it can't fly under sanctions.
We really need to diversify away from Western sanctions prone equipment.
Ramp up JF-17 BLKIII, couple of J-10s and stop gap like FC-31 until AZAM materializes. But also keep battery testing and hammering our planes to find any flaws and upgrades that need to be done.
My feeling is the same -- right now the F-16 pilots might be wearing glasses and showing off but when sanctions bite they'll all be stuck in the cafe room.
That said, I'd be against new-built F-16s. The ideal scenario would be picking up Iraq's F-16s and running them (as well as our existing fleet) through the F-16V upgrade in Pakistan. Of course, it won't happen. It's 'too good' and 'too simple,' and for Pakistan, that can never happen, not in our dreams. So, we're going to end up eating grass.
Otherwise, the money that could go into an off-the-shelf fighter -- J-10CE included -- will end up in Project Azm. It's Project Azm or nothing, basically. The only exception the PAF will make is for the F-16, but more so for the sake of upgrading what it already has, and expanding a fleet it already supports. But it won't put money down for a new so-called 4+/4.5-gen platform; too few birds for too much money.
If, by some twist of fate, the PAF can scrounge up the Iraqi F-16s plus some used A/Bs from Europe, plus the Qatari, Egyptian and some French Mirage 2000s, then it'd be ecstatic, and it'll happily wait until AZM comes alive. But again, their road is never an easy one.