http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/pakistan-minister-china-selling-pakistan

 

China Selling Pakistan 50 Fighter Jets 

Friday, May 20, 2011 
By Christopher Bodeen, Associated Press 

 <http://www.cnsnews.com/image/china-pakistan-0> China-Pakistan

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, left, with Chinese President Hu
Jintao during a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Friday,
May 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Jason Lee, Pool)

Beijing (AP) - China has agreed to provide Pakistan with 50 more fighter
jets in a deal clinched during Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's trip to
Beijing, Pakistani defense officials said Friday.

Gilani's four-day visit highlighted Pakistan's warm ties with China at a
time of heightened tensions with Washington over the killing of Osama bin
Laden in a Pakistani town by American special forces.

Pakistan is seen as eager to show a demanding Washington that it has a
strong diplomatic alternative in uncritical ally China.

Defense Minister Ahmad Mukhtar said Pakistan was seeking delivery within six
months of the JF-17 Thunder jets, a single-engine multirole fighter
developed in cooperation between China and Pakistan.

Mukhtar, who was in Beijing with Gilani, gave no details about financing,
but put the price per plane at $20 million to $25 million, higher than many
defense experts' estimates of $15 million.

China's Foreign Ministry said it had no information about the agreement and
calls to the Defense Ministry rang unanswered.

The planes known as the FC-1 Xiaolong in China are offered for export as
cost-efficient replacements for aging workhorses such as the MiG-21 and
Northrop F-5 Tiger, defense experts say.

Pakistan's initial squadron of 14 was used alongside U.S.-made F-16s to bomb
insurgent strongholds in South Waziristan in 2009, and its air force long
was expected to procure more.

Defense cooperation is a major aspect of what Pakistan and China call their
"all-weather friendship," a term Islamabad accentuates in contrast to more
fickle Washington relations.

China and Pakistan also mutually distrust India, which China fought in a
brief but bloody 1962 border war. Pakistan and India have battled three
times since 1947, including in a 1999 conflict that brought the
nuclear-armed neighbors to the brink of all-out war.

Gilani's visit was long planned as part of commemorations of 60 years of
China-Pakistan diplomatic ties. He has met with top Chinese leaders and
overseen the signing of three agreements on economic and technology
cooperation, banking and mining.

Along with friendship, China provides Pakistan with aid and investment,
while Pakistan offers Beijing diplomatic backing, including among Islamic
nations who might otherwise criticize China's handling of its Muslim Uighur
minority.

While both countries have troubled relations with the U.S., it isn't clear
yet whether warmer ties between them will diminish the importance of their
links to Washington.

Pakistan is furious that the U.S. did not inform it in advance of the May 1
raid that took out bin Laden. Some U.S. lawmakers want the billions in
American aid sent to Pakistan reviewed amid suspicions that elements of its
security forces protected bin Laden.

"I think Gilani hopes that by cozying up to Beijing, Islamabad can hedge its
bets both vis-a-vis Washington to take it seriously and vis-a-vis New Delhi
as a big power supporter against India," said analyst Hugh White, a former
Australian Defense Department chief.

 



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