Quwa
Research Partner
It's not just the company that makes the call tho, US foreign policy is the decisive factor.I disagree.
Vendors will always choose the bigger fry. It looks bad for the company. The entire reason Lockheed renamed the F-16 to the F-21 for India is to distance themselves from Pakistan.
This is the same reason saab on the record said they would halt any new contracts with Pakistan for the sake of pursuing India.
Lockheed knows, any sale to Pakistan has the potential to throw off much bigger Indian deals for good. A few hundred million dollar contract with Pakistan is not worth the bigger impact it will face in India.
Right now, the US prefers getting that big-ticket deal from India because (1) it reinforces the alliance against China and (2) it will make LM et.al much more money than Pakistan.
However, if the US has an interest in engaging the PAF, they can make stuff happen in other ways. This is where Turkiye buying up used C/Ds and re-selling them to the PAF could be a thing, for example.
Or, alternatively, it can softly encourage others to sell to the PAF. We just had Airbus DS show up at IDEAS 2024. Airbus DS' portfolio is what... Typhoon, C295, A400M, and A330 MRTT. India has one of those, and of the other 3, the PAF could plausibly only get one (A330 MRTT), unless... There's a greenlight to market the Typhoon to the PAF.
The issue, I feel, is that the US might have just a tad underestimated the pace of China's aviation and aerospace advances.
Now, the PAF can apparently get the J-35, a new high-tech platform, i.e., an area that the US and Europe previously had exclusive domain over, at least commercially speaking.
IMO, it's possible that the US wasn't considering this to even be an option for the PAF until 2030 or so, but the PAF could have its very first of these new jets by then.
Hence, I think market dynamics may have tilted a little in favour of the PAF. And for the US, the F-16s were a foreign policy tool to keep Pakistan's hawks in line. But if the J-35 and, especially, a new UCAV come, those bets are off.
And when those hawks feel free, then it'd only be a matter of time before Pakistan could possibly destabilize India's situation again. History is full of proof for this: 1960s, 1970s, and 1990s especially.






