Modernising the Bangladesh Air Force: time to turn away from China and Russia

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9 Sep 2024|Khandakar Tahmid Rejwan
Bangladesh_Air_Force_Chengdu_F-7_BG_934_Landing_8174016955-1024x708.jpeg

The Bangladesh Air Force (BAF) needs modernisation. This time, rather than arming itself via Russia and China again, it should look west.

The deposing of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina presents an opportunity for a change of direction. The new government of Muhammad Yunus can modernise the BAF with western equipment. Doing so will strengthen Bangladesh’s long-standing foreign policy of non-alignment. Major BAF weapon systems, such as fighters, utility helicopters and surface-to-air missiles, were made by Russia or China. They are already decades old and have proven unreliable in the field.

Since independence in 1971, Bangladesh has stressed its principle of non-alignment. In maintaining this stance, Dhaka should be careful about Beijing’s and Moscow’s attempts to co-opt developing nations for their strategic advantage. To maintain neutrality, Bangladesh must strike a balance by also turning westward, curtailing over-reliance on Russia and China.

The dependence of Bangladesh’s neighbour Myanmar on China and of India on Russia are further reasons for Bangladesh to seek the superior equipment from the West.

Dhaka already faces tremendous challenges in executing its guiding modernisation program, ‘Forces Goal 2030’. It was offered as a solution to the BAF’s inability to operate modern aircraft, the risks to personnel lives from the existing systems and the need to enforce Bangladesh’s sovereign air space. It also aimed at bringing diversity to the armoury with NATO equipment, but it is likely that it will fall short of this goal.

According to a 1999 RAND report, some developing countries buy Chinese weapons because the equipment is ‘cheap and available’. The same can be said about Russian arms sales. And both of those countries also try to achieve strategic influence over a developing nation by providing broad access to their designs.

The BAF has had to pay a hefty price for this compromise. Four of the 16 Russian Yak-130 fighter-trainers crashed in less than a decade, in one case resulting in the death of the pilot. A pilot ‘went missing’ and was never found when a F-7MB newly acquired from China crashed in the Bay of Bengal in 2015. It has become normal for Chinese-made fighters and basic trainers like K-8 or PT-6 to crash due to malfunctions.

Dhaka should start procuring high-end systems, such as multi-role combat aircraft from reliable and efficient western suppliers. Potential partners include European countries, which make such fighters as the Rafale, Typhoon and Gripen. Though not strictly Western, Japan and South Korea could supply other types of aircraft.

All these states share warm bilateral ties with Bangladesh. Britain and the US perform joint exercises with Bangladesh and pay reciprocal visits. Because of these ties, the BAF’s personnel would welcome the introduction of Western equipment.

The West was critical of Hasina’s blind eye to eroding democratic values and her rigged re-election campaign. Consequently, defence ties were not deepened during her second tenure from 2009 to 2024. That was another reason for Hasina preferring to buy from Beijing and Moscow.

There are also military-technical reasons for the BAF to look to the west in its attempts to modernise. The war in Ukraine has become a graveyard of the Russian military-industrial complex. The sheer amount of Russian hardware lost against a much smaller army is shocking. Chinese systems are predominantly based off on Russian systems and are not battle-tested, as China has not seen an active combat situation since 1979.

Bangladesh’s change of government opens an opportunity to buy from democratic countries that will no longer hesitate in dealing with it as an autocracy. It’s a chance that should be seized.


Author
Khandakar Tahmid Rejwan is a research data analyst at the Bangladesh Peace Observatory-Centre for Alternatives.
 
@Afif the author gives me the old Bdmil site vibe. Trying to earn a few bucks by brokering a deal.

I disagree with the author on complete disregard shown to Russian and Chinese platforms. While the Western jets are certainly more competent in terms of technology, we haven't used the best Russia or China has to offer either.

Also want to highlight a wrong information included by the author, most likely ingenuously. He talks about F7 MB crash in 2015 and stated it was newly acquired. This is incorrect. The MB variant is from 80s/90s. The newer F7 variant we acquired in 2015 was F7 BGI.
 
BD has no money right now and so at most BD should look at acquiring MRSAM systems to at least give some credible air-defence from MAF.

Looking forward to the future BAF should look to build a fighter fleet based around J-31(for IAF) and KAAN(for MAF) for the 2030s. J-31 can come first and will be the more advanced fighter and then KAAN later.
 
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BD has no money right now and so at most BD should look at acquiring MRSAM systems to at least give some credible air-defence from MAF.

Looking forward to the future BAF should look to build a fighter fleet based around J-31(for IAF) and KAAN(for MAF) for the 2030s. J-31 can come first and will be the more advanced fighter and then KAAN later.


You can’t have all your Fighter jets as stealth fighters it just doesn’t work this is what you should worry with Bangladesh. As well you replace your old Chinese with J-31 you will be only be able to buy field small numbers of J-31 and you need 4th Gen Multi role jets and your proposal brother aircraft seems great but I just hope you don’t go to complete stealth.
 
You can’t have all your Fighter jets as stealth fighters it just doesn’t work this is what you should worry with Bangladesh. As well you replace your old Chinese with J-31 you will be only be able to buy field small numbers of J-31 and you need 4th Gen Multi role jets and your proposal brother aircraft seems great but I just hope you don’t go to complete stealth.


BD cannot afford to have a mix of 4th and 5th generation fighters as it is not a military state like Pakistan is and not large like India.

The time for buying a brand new 4th generation platform is well and truly over now, and so when BD hopefully has some money 2-3 years down the line, it should go to China and ask for 2 squadrons of J-31.
 
BD has no money right now and so at most BD should look at acquiring MRSAM systems to at least give some credible air-defence from MAF.

Looking forward to the future BAF should look to build a fighter fleet based around J-31(for IAF) and KAAN(for MAF) for the 2030s. J-31 can come first and will be the more advanced fighter and then KAAN later.
We dont know when J31 development is completed, only 2 prototypes so far being built. KAN is also still being developed and only one prototype so far. I hear the prototype is not flying anymore

While KF21 is already in mass production stage and block 2 development is expected to complete in 2028 inshaAllah.
 
We dont know when J31 development is completed, only 2 prototypes so far being built. KAN is also still being developed and only one prototype so far. I hear the prototype is not flying anymore

While KF21 is already in mass production stage and block 2 development is expected to complete in 2028 inshaAllah.


BD needs as much operational independence as possible.

KF-21 has too much US/European components like engines and missiles and S Korea is a US client state.

J-31 and KAAN are incoming and anway BD has no money now and so ordering anything till at least 2027-2028 is out of the question. It can take a look at the market then and make a decision but it looks likely these are the two fighters it will go for.
 
BD needs as much operational independence as possible.

KF-21 has too much US/European components like engines and missiles and S Korea is a US client state.

J-31 and KAAN are incoming and anway BD has no money now and so ordering anything till at least 2027-2028 is out of the question. It can take a look at the market then and make a decision but it looks likely these are the two fighters it will go for.
60 % KF21 components come from SK companies. Hanwa has the same license production scheme for F414 like TEI Turkish with F110 engine

Korea has ambition for local engine design. Even Wing Man program is already underway.

60 % Korean + some Indonesian input. And dont forget Indonesian IFX will have less US components since they banned 9 technologies for Indo and band 4 technologies for SK.

We have the right to develop IFX with different features and different component. This is the reason we get 5th prototype which is intended to develop IFX version over time
 
Bangladesh needs to learn the lessons of modern conflict and expand it's drone fleet and SAM coverage, for the moment it may be the cheaper more sensible option

Turkey would be the perfect choice, a NATO member that has products of NATO quality, and a relationship you can place more trust on then the west

I also see nothing wrong with China as option, and J10C and later J31 would be perfect options
 
60 % KF21 components come from SK companies. Hanwa has the same license production scheme for F414 like TEI Turkish with F110 engine

Korea has ambition for local engine design. Even Wing Man program is already underway.

60 % Korean + some Indonesian input. And dont forget Indonesian IFX will have less US components since they banned 9 technologies for Indo and band 4 technologies for SK.

We have the right to develop IFX with different features and different component. This is the reason we get 5th prototype which is intended to develop IFX version over time


Well if Indonesia can come up with something on the level of KAAN then that would be worth considering. I appreciate that the amount of western subsystems will be gradually reduced over time and so maybe there would be less to worry about in terms of operational independence.

Indonesia would be a reliable friendly Muslim country and can stand up to outside pressure even better than Turkey, due to its more diversified economy and less reliance on the US/west for trade.

However BD has already started buying into the Turkish military "eco-system" as it looks like it is very close to a contract for Hisar-O+ MRSAM. BD military seems to be keen to make Turkey a major military supplier, along with the traditional Chinese.
 
60 % KF21 components come from SK companies. Hanwa has the same license production scheme for F414 like TEI Turkish with F110 engine

Korea has ambition for local engine design. Even Wing Man program is already underway.

60 % Korean + some Indonesian input. And dont forget Indonesian IFX will have less US components since they banned 9 technologies for Indo and band 4 technologies for SK.

We have the right to develop IFX with different features and different component. This is the reason we get 5th prototype which is intended to develop IFX version over time
What is the length for BD airfield. IFX is planned to be able to operate in shorter airfield runway and able to carry larger fuel tanks. This is the different of KF21 and IFX for block 1 and also less US components in IFX

Both KF21 and IFX is planned to continously being developed with Korean has ambition to increasing the Korean local content from current 60% and ambition to use its own engine design while Indonesia is also pushing with more local content in the avionics and has strong relation with both France and Turkey defense industries
 
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