Rational Philosopher
Trusted Member
I hope so, and I want to remain optimistic about it. Definitely feels like an improvement from the Project Azm days.If we see in retrospective way, PFX is indeed the outcome of that mistake. Not realizing the limitation and not working on acquiring missing technical and industrial prowess. Even the entire NASTP is the outcome of that, IMHO. PAF had realized during the last decade that self-sufficiency is the only way forward but couldn't realized that it's not a readymade available thing, one has to earn it through solid planning, financial support, and political backing. NASTP got all these and that's why I see good things emerging out of those places including sub-systems for PFX and beyond. PAF must continue working on PFX regardless of failures and time. Goal here is not just building an aircraft but building an aerospace eco-system.
But culturally we have an issue with severely underestimating the complexity of building high-end products, and rushing things while ignoring critical fundamentals. We tend to lack discipline and competency because of a laid back attitude.
I hope this new set-up builds on the strong fundamentals in a competent manner so it can eventually build-up to the final goal of high-end manned fighters actually of highly quality.
This means, a strong ecosystem that creates high quality human resources (STEM base), working on advanced materials and precision machinery, and modern manufacturing methods. It would mean getting the private sector involved by reducing red tape and making internal culture at government owned workshops more conductive. Our boomer gernail culture hates this stuff, they operate more like a strict military camp.






