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The F-16 Offer to India — India Might Refuse It, But Pakistan Can’t Ignore It

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Please read this article... Its a wonderful article representing what many of us already are saying. Irrespective of your nationalities, be it Indian or be it Pakistani or any other nation, the author wrote quite a true account.

+++
The F-16 Offer to India — India Might Refuse It, But Pakistan Can’t Ignore It

Aug30by Piper Bayard
Bayard & Holmes
~ Jay Holmes


For the last few years, military and foreign policy aficionados around the world, not to mention very excited governments and corporate accountants, have been following the Indian government’s fighter procurement plans.

The process has been more dramatic and colorful than the average major defense purchase. Given the profit potential of any contract to supply modern fighters to the Indian Air Force (“IAF”), we would expect fierce competition from fighter jet manufacturers accompanied by massive propaganda campaigns from both government and corporate sources. We would not be disappointed.




UAE F-16 Block 60 - Similar to F-16 Block 70 Offered to India
Image public domain, wikimedia commons


The technical aspects of the competition have been debated by millions of passionate aviation “experts.”

Unfortunately, most of those “experts” either have no experience in piloting or aerospace engineering, or they work for companies connected to the competition. My purpose in publishing this article is not to add to the technical and political debates. My hope is to consider some interesting geopolitical/geo-corporate questions that have arisen from the long and dramatic procurement process. My spellchecker is resisting the term “geocorporate,” but I fear that the time has come when the term is both fair and depressingly relevant.

The IAF wants a new fighter.

It wants a fighter that is better than their current hodgepodge mix of aircraft from a slew of countries and manufacturers. For both domestic and foreign political reasons, the IAF also wants guarantees of parts and weapons availability without interference from the governments where the aircraft is manufactured each time the political climate changes in those governments.

For domestic political reasons, the Indian government wants major technology transfer and local work cost offsets of 50%.

For those who are not acquainted with industry jargon, that means the Indian government wants the ability to use the same or similar technology to produce the same or similar products, and it wants half of the cost of production to be spent in India.

The serious competitors for India’s fighter deal were France’s Dassault Rafale, the Eurofighter Typhoon, and Sweden’s Gripen. Other competitors offered their products but were, justifiably, seen as dark horses in the race for the huge contract.

US Boeing half-heartedly offered the F-18 Super Hornet, but perhaps did so with the hope of eventually convincing the IAF to consider them for use on future Indian carriers. The F-18 would not seem to be ideally suited for the IAF’s particular requirements.

US Lockheed Martin offered the F-16 C/D. Given the age of the airframe design and India’s desire for a massive technology transfer, it seemed unlikely that India would choose the F-16. It didn’t.

Russia straight-facedly tried to offer up everything in their inventory, along with a few things not actually in their inventory.


Given the IAF’s torturous troubles in dealing with Russian aircraft companies Mikoyan and Sukhoi on previously purchased fighters, there seemed little chance of the IAF choosing a fighter from Russia. The IAF has been sold too many lemons over India’s decades of purchasing Russian military equipment, and the Russians have refused to uphold warranty promises. Russia may have saved money in the short term by screwing India on these deals, but in the process, it pretty well lost a customer.

The IAF has been pleased with the performance of the Dassault Mirage 2000s that they previously purchased from France.


The Mirages have performed well for it. Also, when the rest of the West embargoed weapons sales to India in response to nuclear weapons tests or conflicts with Pakistan and China, France continued to supply weapons and parts to India. Naturally, India has remembered this. Likewise, the IAF is confident that unless it starts bombing the very best restaurants and art museums in Paris, Dassault will remain willing to take their cash.

Without even considering technical arguments, the Swedish Gripen relies on critical parts from other nations, making it unlikely. Getting those nations to agree to a Swedish export of their technologies to India was going to be about as easy as getting all of France to switch to a Swedish cuisine diet. If you’ve ever eaten in Sweden, you will recognize this proposition as absurd humor.

Note to Swedish people: I like you. You are lovely people. Most of your food sucks.

But back to fighter planes…

The Eurofighter Typhoon might have met the technical requirements set forth by the IAF, but India would be at the mercy of the governments of Germany, the UK, and Italy for parts and weapons if they ever tried to do something crazy with those Eurofighters like perhaps fight with anyone. The Eurofighter, like the Grippen was a bad political choice.

In January 2012, to nobody’s real surprise, the Indian Government announced that the Dassault Rafale had won the competition for the huge contract of 126 multirole fighters.

It was a slam dunk for Dassault. Almost. As my grandma told me, the devil’s in the details.

Dassault was anxious to deliver the Rafales. The IAF was anxious to receive them. I was not going to hold my breath waiting for the first Rafale to be delivered to the IAF.

The small matters of price and warranties remained to be settled. Dassault vacillated on the price as India pressed for more technology transfer. The pricing started high, then got lower, then got higher again, then lower, etc. As the months and years passed, the first Rafale fighter was never delivered because the parties could never agree to details on price, warranty, and technology transfer. Unlike the average American tourist in Paris, the IAF was willing to argue about the bill.

Finally in March 2014, India and France announced that the first 18 aircraft would be delivered to India in flying condition – off the rack, so to speak – at a cost of $200 million + per fighter. Another 108 would be 70 percent built by HAL Corporation of India. The 18 seemed to me like a very high priced improbability, and building more with 70% construction by Hal in India struck me as more fanciful than home fusion generator trash disposal units.

In April of 2015, India indeed announced that the purchase had advanced to the long anticipated “Hell no, we won’t buy any” stage of the negotiations. No cash, no new fighters, nothing.

And then Lockheed Martin slipped in and knocked on the back door with a very interesting proposal.

Lockheed Martin offered to move its entire production of F-16s to India if India would upgrade the order to the F-16 Block 70 model.

Instead of technology transfer debates, Lockheed Martin will let India build the fighters on a Lockheed Martin system installed for less than $30 Million per fighter.

And as grandma would say, again, the devil is in the details.

Lockheed Martin can propose all they want, but the US government will have to completely agree to all the details of any transfer of F-16 technologies and production to India.


Many US allies fly the F-16.

Some fly newer, recently-built versions and will be flying them for a long time. In fact, without any new orders, Lockheed Martin will be busy turning out F-16s for at least another year to satisfy current orders. Neither Lockheed Martin nor the US government wants to aggravate these allies by telling them to get their parts from India.

The Pakistan Air Force flies F-16s.

For Pakistan, which is in a state of perpetual low level war and near-war with India, hating India is central to its dogma. How many parts will India send to Pakistan? Maybe a few nylon seat covers and some cool looking decals. That’s about it. In effect, Lockheed Martin is telling the Pakistan government to piss off.

The Lockheed Martin offer is not officially coming from the US government.

If John Kerry visited Pakistan tomorrow, he would swear to them that he loves Pakistan, roots for the Pakistani national cricket team, loves Pakistani food, and that some of his best friends are Pakistanis. John would not believe any of it, and neither would anyone in Pakistan.

Though the Lockheed Martin proposal has not yet received US government approval, it’s hard to believe that the Lockheed Martin tail is wagging the US government dog.


The Lockheed Martin proposal to India represents a major shift in US foreign policy toward both India and Pakistan. Is the US finally accepting that Pakistan has never been and never will be anything like an ally? Are we offering a closer relationship to India?

My guess is that Lockheed Martin and India will not conclude the deal in its current form. At this point, the proposal can be withdrawn for any number of reasons, but the message to both India and Pakistan will stand. India might not take the Lockheed Martin offer seriously, but Pakistan must.


https://piperbayard.wordpress.com/2...-might-refuse-it-but-pakistan-cant-ignore-it/

About the author

Bayard-Holmes-Official-Photo.jpg


‘Jay Holmes’ is a field intelligence veteran of the Cold War and pretty much every war since then. He remains an anonymous senior intelligence operative. Piper Bayard is an author and the public face of their partnership. Together, they are the bestselling authors of The Spy Bride.


Tagging The whole world. Bcz this is a wonderful read for all people..

@Abingdonboy @anant_s @Taygibay @Picdelamirand-oil @Vergennes @randomradio @Ankit Kumar 002 @MilSpec @Koovie @Echo_419 @Dash @hellfire @ito @SR-91 @AMCA @DesiGuy1403 @ranjeet @hellfire @fsayed @SpArK @AUSTERLITZ @nair @proud_indian @Roybot @jbgt90 @Sergi @Water Car Engineer @dadeechi @kurup @Rain Man @kaykay @Joe Shearer @Tshering22 @Dandpatta @danger007 @Didact @Soumitra @SrNair @TejasMk3@jbgt90 @ranjeet @4GTejasBVR @The_Showstopper @guest11 @egodoc222 @Nilgiri @SarthakGanguly @Omega007 @GURU DUTT @HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular @Spectre@litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular@Ryuzaki @CorporateAffairs @GR!FF!N @migflug @Levina@SvenSvensonov @-xXx- @Perpendicular @proud_indian @Mustang06 @Param @Local_Legend @Ali Zadi @hellfire @egodoc222 @CorporateAffairs @Major Shaitan Singh @jha @SmilingBuddha @#hydra# @danish_vij @[Bregs] @Skillrex @Hephaestus @SR-91 @Techy @litefire @R!CK @zebra7 @dev_moh @DesiGuy1403 @itachii @nik141993 @Marxist @Glorino @noksss @jbgt90 @Skull and Bones @Kraitcorp @Crixus @waz @WAJsal @Oscar @AugenBlick @Star Wars @GuardianRED @arp2041 @Aero @GuardianRED @others @Blue Marlin
@Areesh @Chinese-Dragon @Nilgiri @Tipu7 @Taimoor Khan @The Eagle @The Sandman @Zibago @Imran Khan @Sheikh Rauf @Mrc @jkroo @cirr @grey boy 2 @ChineseTiger1986 @AndrewJin @Sinopakfriend @HAKIKAT @Major Sam @Hiptullha @Super Falcon @My-Analogous @Moonlight @django @LA se Karachi @Bratva @Irfan Baloch @Zarvan @Hassan Guy @Oscar @MastanKhan @Rashid Mahmood @dadeechi @Jlaw @Spy Master @T-Rex @idune @shah1398 @User @dsr478 @TheGreatOne @salarsikander @maximuswarrior @Max @HAIDER @DESERT FIGHTER @Penguin @Windjammer @I S I @dexter @Doordie @LadyFinger @Spring Onion @Mentee @Mr.Meap @Azlan Haider @Genghis khan1 @Sarge @Ghareeb_Da_Baal @EAK @Khan_21 @Narendra Trump@HRK @MastanKhan


@PaklovesTurkiye - Can you tag anybody else whom we might have missed. This is a wonderful often debated topic.
 
Nothing new to this article then already known to many

Is the US finally accepting that Pakistan has never been and never will be anything like an ally? Are we offering a closer relationship to India?
This part shows the depth about strategic partnership and how countries work in there best interest ,US & PAk is best example and similarly India US chapter is continuation of the same
 
@Mugwop @WaLeEdK2 @T-Rex @idune @Mrc @Falcon26 @Olaf One-Brow @Windjammer @Winchester

On topic.....With all respect to author, Pakistan already did take note of your offer to India regarding F16s otherwise we would not have been talking about getting Russian SU-35s....

US has formidable jets, all respect to them but we don't want to rely on US alone anymore.

Pakistan and US relations seems to be normal and taunting each other is no new thing. Pakistan won't stop supporting China nor US will take tough stance against India. Pakistanis and Americans know that.
 
An American bragging and chest thumping as usual. Tell me something new. This is like me shamelessly praising myself at my own birthday party. The Americans are experts of such shameless self-bragging.

We couldn't care less if the Indians were offered the F-22. The Americans have already transgressed all limits by offering nothing less than nuclear technology to the Indians. The naive author somehow thinks that Pakistan is worried about F-16s going to India or the mighty American gesture itself. Well, he and she are in for a rude awakening because the writing has always been on the wall. They milked us and we milked them. End of story.

It is sour grapes for these silly Yanks because they know that Pakistan has aligned itself with China for its defense requirements. The CPEC also proves that China Pakistan partnership far exceeds mutual interests.
 
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India might not take the Lockheed Martin offer seriously, but Pakistan must.

Lets put the technological advantage aside, just imagine how great could be physiological impact on PAF, that their main adversary has much better version of their best horse.

PAF has not chosen their horses very wisely.
 
Lets put the technological advantage aside, just imagine how great could be physiological impact on PAF, that their main adversary has much better version of their best horse.

PAF has not chosen their horses very wisely.

We can only argue that Pakistan hasn't chosen wisely after the fallout with the Yanks. Our obsession with these outdated machines is beyond ridiculous though.

Having said that, the Americans did bribe us with F-16s during and before the Cold War. Things were going smoothly back then. We cannot say that Pakistan didn't choose wisely back then. The political landscape changes very quickly. Friends become enemies and enemies friends in a blink of an eye.
 
In effect, Lockheed Martin is telling the Pakistan government to piss off



Jay Holmes’ is a field intelligence veteran of the Cold War and pretty much every war since then. He remains an anonymous senior intelligence operative. Piper Bayard is an author and the public face of their partnership.



Between the language and the interesting bio, I don't know what to laugh at.
 
We can only argue that Pakistan hasn't chosen wisely after the fallout with the Yanks. Our obsession for these outdated machines is beyond ridiculous though.

Having said that, these Americans did bribe us with F-16s during and before the Cold War. Things were going smoothly back then. We cannot say that Pakistan didn't choose wisely back then. The political landscape changes very quickly. Friends become enemies and enemies friends in a blink of an eye.
True, back in 80s, decision was ok. but,
PAF should have learned at least after sanctions and then Kargil was much bigger eye opening.
 
True, back in 80s, decision was ok. but,
PAF should have learned at least after sanctions and then Kargil was much bigger eye opening.

Absolutely, but it is never too late. We need to use the F-16s as long as their time is up. We are stuck with these machines. Fortunately, the PAF has started looking beyond the F-16. In fact, the recent trend proves this fact affirmatively.
 
In effect, Lockheed Martin is telling the Pakistan government to piss off



Jay Holmes’ is a field intelligence veteran of the Cold War and pretty much every war since then. He remains an anonymous senior intelligence operative. Piper Bayard is an author and the public face of their partnership.



Between the language and the interesting bio, I don't know what to laugh at.


I saw that but what is interesting is small tit bits of how he portrays USA using both sides in a small but subtle manner..

Some are funny lines like this
Lockheed Martin offered to move its entire production of F-16s to India if India would upgrade the order to the F-16 Block 70 model.

Instead of technology transfer debates, Lockheed Martin will let India build the fighters on a Lockheed Martin system installed for less than $30 Million per fighter.

And as grandma would say, again, the devil is in the details.

Lockheed Martin can propose all they want, but the US government will have to completely agree to all the details of any transfer of F-16 technologies and production to India.


or this
If John Kerry visited Pakistan tomorrow, he would swear to them that he loves Pakistan, roots for the Pakistani national cricket team, loves Pakistani food, and that some of his best friends are Pakistanis. John would not believe any of it, and neither would anyone in Pakistan.

++ We both countries gets blinded by USA who plays as per their "interests" .. Kerry line is actually a known fact bcz look at today when he met sushma swaraj and said this

upload_2016-8-31_19-8-11.png

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...akistan-terrorism-india-us-relations-3005111/

You see how folks change stances so easily.. and i can bet with you Euro 100 right now if he lands in islamabad tomorrow, his tone and posture will change .. right there in front of the whole world..

My aim is to showcase that same thing even though writer may be a bit odd in writing stuff..

Lets put the technological advantage aside, just imagine how great could be physiological impact on PAF, that their main adversary has much better version of their best horse.

PAF has not chosen their horses very wisely.
One of the best comments.. and rightly explained by next one
We can only argue that Pakistan hasn't chosen wisely after the fallout with the Yanks. Our obsession with these outdated machines is beyond ridiculous though.

Having said that, the Americans did bribe us with F-16s during and before the Cold War. Things were going smoothly back then. We cannot say that Pakistan didn't choose wisely back then. The political landscape changes very quickly. Friends become enemies and enemies friends in a blink of an eye.
excellent point sir..
And I can assure you that Pakistan has indeed taken seriously the changing geopolitical dynamics in the region, already.
I hope so sir.. i hope so..
and i hope we dont fall for the bait..
 
In effect, Lockheed Martin is telling the Pakistan government to piss off



Jay Holmes’ is a field intelligence veteran of the Cold War and pretty much every war since then. He remains an anonymous senior intelligence operative. Piper Bayard is an author and the public face of their partnership.



Between the language and the interesting bio, I don't know what to laugh at.

Cold War veterans i.e. supporters and creators of the Jihad narrative of this day and age. The founding fathers of Jihadism. The irony of it.

The F-16 Offer to India — India Might Refuse It, But Pakistan Can’t Ignore It

The beauty lies in the title. Already dejected that India is going to refuse as they have previously done with the F-18 offer. Yet, spin the story and put the onus on Pakistan. Yanks and their fabulous fantasies.
 
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I hope so sir.. i hope so..
and i hope we dont fall for the bait..

There is no bait here for India, and none for Pakistan either. Please let me explain briefly.

I am on record here clearly stating that India's international rise will continue, but at a price. It will get NSG and UNSC memberships too. The price will be in opening up its markets and adapting international systems. Whether India is capable of doing that still remains to be seen. (I was thoroughly condemned for saying that India will rise and shine, but that is another story. :D )

This F-16 offer is a step along the same path. If India can adapt its business practices to those of the West, immense geopolitical and economic benefits will follow. But can India do that?

Regarding Pakistan, this change in the regional geopolitical scenario was a long time coming. The recent signing of LEMOA was a good step forward for India, but it was Pakistan that created the groundwork for it by its own "hard work". Going forward, I have no doubt that Pakistan has grasped the magnitude of the change, but whether it will come up will a viable alternative remains to be seen.

I am quite content to sit back and watch. :D
 
Please read this article... Its a wonderful article representing what many of us already are saying. Irrespective of your nationalities, be it Indian or be it Pakistani or any other nation, the author wrote quite a true account.

+++
The F-16 Offer to India — India Might Refuse It, But Pakistan Can’t Ignore It

Aug30by Piper Bayard
Bayard & Holmes
~ Jay Holmes


For the last few years, military and foreign policy aficionados around the world, not to mention very excited governments and corporate accountants, have been following the Indian government’s fighter procurement plans.

The process has been more dramatic and colorful than the average major defense purchase. Given the profit potential of any contract to supply modern fighters to the Indian Air Force (“IAF”), we would expect fierce competition from fighter jet manufacturers accompanied by massive propaganda campaigns from both government and corporate sources. We would not be disappointed.




UAE F-16 Block 60 - Similar to F-16 Block 70 Offered to India
Image public domain, wikimedia commons


The technical aspects of the competition have been debated by millions of passionate aviation “experts.”

Unfortunately, most of those “experts” either have no experience in piloting or aerospace engineering, or they work for companies connected to the competition. My purpose in publishing this article is not to add to the technical and political debates. My hope is to consider some interesting geopolitical/geo-corporate questions that have arisen from the long and dramatic procurement process. My spellchecker is resisting the term “geocorporate,” but I fear that the time has come when the term is both fair and depressingly relevant.

The IAF wants a new fighter.

It wants a fighter that is better than their current hodgepodge mix of aircraft from a slew of countries and manufacturers. For both domestic and foreign political reasons, the IAF also wants guarantees of parts and weapons availability without interference from the governments where the aircraft is manufactured each time the political climate changes in those governments.

For domestic political reasons, the Indian government wants major technology transfer and local work cost offsets of 50%.

For those who are not acquainted with industry jargon, that means the Indian government wants the ability to use the same or similar technology to produce the same or similar products, and it wants half of the cost of production to be spent in India.

The serious competitors for India’s fighter deal were France’s Dassault Rafale, the Eurofighter Typhoon, and Sweden’s Gripen. Other competitors offered their products but were, justifiably, seen as dark horses in the race for the huge contract.

US Boeing half-heartedly offered the F-18 Super Hornet, but perhaps did so with the hope of eventually convincing the IAF to consider them for use on future Indian carriers. The F-18 would not seem to be ideally suited for the IAF’s particular requirements.

US Lockheed Martin offered the F-16 C/D. Given the age of the airframe design and India’s desire for a massive technology transfer, it seemed unlikely that India would choose the F-16. It didn’t.

Russia straight-facedly tried to offer up everything in their inventory, along with a few things not actually in their inventory.


Given the IAF’s torturous troubles in dealing with Russian aircraft companies Mikoyan and Sukhoi on previously purchased fighters, there seemed little chance of the IAF choosing a fighter from Russia. The IAF has been sold too many lemons over India’s decades of purchasing Russian military equipment, and the Russians have refused to uphold warranty promises. Russia may have saved money in the short term by screwing India on these deals, but in the process, it pretty well lost a customer.

The IAF has been pleased with the performance of the Dassault Mirage 2000s that they previously purchased from France.


The Mirages have performed well for it. Also, when the rest of the West embargoed weapons sales to India in response to nuclear weapons tests or conflicts with Pakistan and China, France continued to supply weapons and parts to India. Naturally, India has remembered this. Likewise, the IAF is confident that unless it starts bombing the very best restaurants and art museums in Paris, Dassault will remain willing to take their cash.

Without even considering technical arguments, the Swedish Gripen relies on critical parts from other nations, making it unlikely. Getting those nations to agree to a Swedish export of their technologies to India was going to be about as easy as getting all of France to switch to a Swedish cuisine diet. If you’ve ever eaten in Sweden, you will recognize this proposition as absurd humor.

Note to Swedish people: I like you. You are lovely people. Most of your food sucks.

But back to fighter planes…

The Eurofighter Typhoon might have met the technical requirements set forth by the IAF, but India would be at the mercy of the governments of Germany, the UK, and Italy for parts and weapons if they ever tried to do something crazy with those Eurofighters like perhaps fight with anyone. The Eurofighter, like the Grippen was a bad political choice.

In January 2012, to nobody’s real surprise, the Indian Government announced that the Dassault Rafale had won the competition for the huge contract of 126 multirole fighters.

It was a slam dunk for Dassault. Almost. As my grandma told me, the devil’s in the details.

Dassault was anxious to deliver the Rafales. The IAF was anxious to receive them. I was not going to hold my breath waiting for the first Rafale to be delivered to the IAF.

The small matters of price and warranties remained to be settled. Dassault vacillated on the price as India pressed for more technology transfer. The pricing started high, then got lower, then got higher again, then lower, etc. As the months and years passed, the first Rafale fighter was never delivered because the parties could never agree to details on price, warranty, and technology transfer. Unlike the average American tourist in Paris, the IAF was willing to argue about the bill.

Finally in March 2014, India and France announced that the first 18 aircraft would be delivered to India in flying condition – off the rack, so to speak – at a cost of $200 million + per fighter. Another 108 would be 70 percent built by HAL Corporation of India. The 18 seemed to me like a very high priced improbability, and building more with 70% construction by Hal in India struck me as more fanciful than home fusion generator trash disposal units.

In April of 2015, India indeed announced that the purchase had advanced to the long anticipated “Hell no, we won’t buy any” stage of the negotiations. No cash, no new fighters, nothing.

And then Lockheed Martin slipped in and knocked on the back door with a very interesting proposal.

Lockheed Martin offered to move its entire production of F-16s to India if India would upgrade the order to the F-16 Block 70 model.

Instead of technology transfer debates, Lockheed Martin will let India build the fighters on a Lockheed Martin system installed for less than $30 Million per fighter.

And as grandma would say, again, the devil is in the details.

Lockheed Martin can propose all they want, but the US government will have to completely agree to all the details of any transfer of F-16 technologies and production to India.


Many US allies fly the F-16.

Some fly newer, recently-built versions and will be flying them for a long time. In fact, without any new orders, Lockheed Martin will be busy turning out F-16s for at least another year to satisfy current orders. Neither Lockheed Martin nor the US government wants to aggravate these allies by telling them to get their parts from India.

The Pakistan Air Force flies F-16s.

For Pakistan, which is in a state of perpetual low level war and near-war with India, hating India is central to its dogma. How many parts will India send to Pakistan? Maybe a few nylon seat covers and some cool looking decals. That’s about it. In effect, Lockheed Martin is telling the Pakistan government to piss off.

The Lockheed Martin offer is not officially coming from the US government.

If John Kerry visited Pakistan tomorrow, he would swear to them that he loves Pakistan, roots for the Pakistani national cricket team, loves Pakistani food, and that some of his best friends are Pakistanis. John would not believe any of it, and neither would anyone in Pakistan.

Though the Lockheed Martin proposal has not yet received US government approval, it’s hard to believe that the Lockheed Martin tail is wagging the US government dog.


The Lockheed Martin proposal to India represents a major shift in US foreign policy toward both India and Pakistan. Is the US finally accepting that Pakistan has never been and never will be anything like an ally? Are we offering a closer relationship to India?

My guess is that Lockheed Martin and India will not conclude the deal in its current form. At this point, the proposal can be withdrawn for any number of reasons, but the message to both India and Pakistan will stand. India might not take the Lockheed Martin offer seriously, but Pakistan must.


https://piperbayard.wordpress.com/2...-might-refuse-it-but-pakistan-cant-ignore-it/

About the author

Bayard-Holmes-Official-Photo.jpg


‘Jay Holmes’ is a field intelligence veteran of the Cold War and pretty much every war since then. He remains an anonymous senior intelligence operative. Piper Bayard is an author and the public face of their partnership. Together, they are the bestselling authors of The Spy Bride.


Tagging The whole world. Bcz this is a wonderful read for all people..

@Abingdonboy @anant_s @Taygibay @Picdelamirand-oil @Vergennes @randomradio @Ankit Kumar 002 @MilSpec @Koovie @Echo_419 @Dash @hellfire @ito @SR-91 @AMCA @DesiGuy1403 @ranjeet @hellfire @fsayed @SpArK @AUSTERLITZ @nair @proud_indian @Roybot @jbgt90 @Sergi @Water Car Engineer @dadeechi @kurup @Rain Man @kaykay @Joe Shearer @Tshering22 @Dandpatta @danger007 @Didact @Soumitra @SrNair @TejasMk3@jbgt90 @ranjeet @4GTejasBVR @The_Showstopper @guest11 @egodoc222 @Nilgiri @SarthakGanguly @Omega007 @GURU DUTT @HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular @Spectre@litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular@Ryuzaki @CorporateAffairs @GR!FF!N @migflug @Levina@SvenSvensonov @-xXx- @Perpendicular @proud_indian @Mustang06 @Param @Local_Legend @Ali Zadi @hellfire @egodoc222 @CorporateAffairs @Major Shaitan Singh @jha @SmilingBuddha @#hydra# @danish_vij @[Bregs] @Skillrex @Hephaestus @SR-91 @Techy @litefire @R!CK @zebra7 @dev_moh @DesiGuy1403 @itachii @nik141993 @Marxist @Glorino @noksss @jbgt90 @Skull and Bones @Kraitcorp @Crixus @waz @WAJsal @Oscar @AugenBlick @Star Wars @GuardianRED @arp2041 @Aero @GuardianRED @others @Blue Marlin
@Areesh @Chinese-Dragon @Nilgiri @Tipu7 @Taimoor Khan @The Eagle @The Sandman @Zibago @Imran Khan @Sheikh Rauf @Mrc @jkroo @cirr @grey boy 2 @ChineseTiger1986 @AndrewJin @Sinopakfriend @HAKIKAT @Major Sam @Hiptullha @Super Falcon @My-Analogous @Moonlight @django @LA se Karachi @Bratva @Irfan Baloch @Zarvan @Hassan Guy @Oscar @MastanKhan @Rashid Mahmood @dadeechi @Jlaw @Spy Master @T-Rex @idune @shah1398 @User @dsr478 @TheGreatOne @salarsikander @maximuswarrior @Max @HAIDER @DESERT FIGHTER @Penguin @Windjammer @I S I @dexter @Doordie @LadyFinger @Spring Onion @Mentee @Mr.Meap @Azlan Haider @Genghis khan1 @Sarge @Ghareeb_Da_Baal @EAK @Khan_21 @Narendra Trump@HRK @MastanKhan


@PaklovesTurkiye - Can you tag anybody else whom we might have missed. This is a wonderful often debated topic.
Hi Pari,

No wonder its very refreshing and inoormatve at sametime to read your posts. The content you post is just as wonderful as youre ( though I haven't met you personally, but would love) on second note. why didn't ya tag. I am your greatest fan of writing :pissed:

Now getting back to original post. The reason My IAF chose MMRCA has been very well explained in brief. Its no wonder why they went for it an for a good reason until the french tried to act smart. I am all up with India on this one. India can pay upfront in cash, hence it has every right to make the best use of its funds. It is true that What Lockheed will offer in terms of TOT will be nothing more than as assembly line which will be monitored and controlled from white HOUSE. India will not be able to enjoy as much as freedom as it does on MKI or for Rafael if it comes, as we all are very well aware of how painful end user agreement of US are. Who would know it more better than us Pakistanis.

The best option for IAF in medium category is continue to develop Tejas into formidable fighter and go for super sukhor upgrade. With amount CAPEX lying around, it can be used for more R&D and to purchase sub-components for TEJAS

And I can assure you that Pakistan has indeed taken seriously the changing geopolitical dynamics in the region, already.
Only this stime both of us are on wrong side of table as we should have been otherwise.

If Pakistan for that matter had taken a serious note of that. We wouldn't be begging for f solaa rather we would be making some efforts for jf-17. But then again or geopolitical mentality is very regional

but it was Pakistan that created the groundwork for it by its own "hard work". Going forward,
You wrote that earlier in another thread. I am very keen to learn what you actually mean by that. Though I wouldn't disagree with you, if I get it correctly. But, still I would insist on going about in more detail
 
We have been going on and on about what the article describes. @dadheechi .. No F16 baby ... and no Gripen...

I saw that but what is interesting is small tit bits of how he portrays USA using both sides in a small but subtle manner..

Some are funny lines like this
Lockheed Martin offered to move its entire production of F-16s to India if India would upgrade the order to the F-16 Block 70 model.

Instead of technology transfer debates, Lockheed Martin will let India build the fighters on a Lockheed Martin system installed for less than $30 Million per fighter.

And as grandma would say, again, the devil is in the details.

Lockheed Martin can propose all they want, but the US government will have to completely agree to all the details of any transfer of F-16 technologies and production to India.


or this
If John Kerry visited Pakistan tomorrow, he would swear to them that he loves Pakistan, roots for the Pakistani national cricket team, loves Pakistani food, and that some of his best friends are Pakistanis. John would not believe any of it, and neither would anyone in Pakistan.

++ We both countries gets blinded by USA who plays as per their "interests" .. Kerry line is actually a known fact bcz look at today when he met sushma swaraj and said this

View attachment 330347
http://indianexpress.com/article/in...akistan-terrorism-india-us-relations-3005111/

You see how folks change stances so easily.. and i can bet with you Euro 100 right now if he lands in islamabad tomorrow, his tone and posture will change .. right there in front of the whole world..

My aim is to showcase that same thing even though writer may be a bit odd in writing stuff..


One of the best comments.. and rightly explained by next one

excellent point sir..

I hope so sir.. i hope so..
and i hope we dont fall for the bait..
He is the kerry of the infamous Kerry-Luger bill.
 

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