Pakistan flexes aerial reach with JF-17 jets deployment to UK air show after India clash

The screengrab taken from the video shared by Pakistan AirForce on July 17, 2025, shows Pakistani pilots posing for picture with Pakistani aircraft at the Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT) in at Royal Air Force Base Fairford in southern England. (Pakistan Air Force)
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Updated 17 July 2025
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Pakistan flexes aerial reach with JF-17 jets deployment to UK air show after India clash

  • Military says the deployment and midair refueling demonstrate operational capability beyond borders
  • UK’s Royal International Air Tattoo is one of the world’s most prestigious military aviation exhibitions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has deployed its latest JF-17 Thunder Block-III fighter jets to the United Kingdom for the Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT), said an official statement on Thursday, marking a high-profile demonstration of airpower weeks after a brief but tense military standoff with neighboring India.

The aircraft landed at Royal Air Force Base Fairford in southern England ahead of RIAT 2025, one of the world’s largest and most prestigious military aviation exhibitions. Held annually, the three-day event attracts air forces from around the world, offering a platform for aerial demonstrations, aircraft displays and military diplomacy.

This year’s show includes participation from over 60 nations and is themed “Eyes in the Skies,” highlighting advances in airborne surveillance and global security.

“Contingent of the Pakistan Air Force comprising state-of-the-art JF-17 Thunder Block-III fighter aircraft and the C-130 Hercules transport aircraft, has landed at the Royal Air Force Base Fairford, United Kingdom, to participate in the prestigious Royal International Air Tattoo – 2025,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement.

“Pakistan Air Force’s JF-17 Thunder Block-III fighters executed successful Air-to-Air Refueling operations en route to United Kingdom with the support of a PAF IL-78 aerial refueling tanker,” it continued. “The intricate refueling operation demonstrated PAF’s long-range operational capabilities and the proficiency of its air and ground crew in conducting extended operations beyond national borders.”

The JF-17 Block-III is a 4.5-generation, multi-role fighter equipped with an AESA radar and long-range beyond-visual-range (BVR) missile capability. Co-developed by Pakistan and China, the aircraft has become the centerpiece of Pakistan’s indigenous airpower strategy.

The deployment is part of PAF’s broader effort to highlight its modernization and operational readiness.

The statement also noted heightened interest in the JF-17’s arrival, particularly among defense observers and aviation enthusiasts following the recent India-Pakistan conflict, during which the PAF downed several Indian fighter jets.
 


Pakistan rules out talks with militants after Islamabad court blast

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Pakistan rules out talks with militants after Islamabad court blast

  • Mohsin Naqvi briefs Acting US Ambassador on Islamabad suicide bombing, says all suspects traced and facilitators arrested
  • Meeting follows collapse of Pakistan–Afghanistan talks on cross-border militancy, surge in attacks claimed by TTP group 

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said on Tuesday, “negotiations and terrorist attacks cannot proceed simultaneously,” as he briefed Acting US Ambassador Natalie Baker on a deadly suicide blast outside a district court in Islamabad and Pakistan’s ongoing counter-terrorism operations.

The Nov. 11 attack near the entrance of the court complex in the capital killed 12 people and wounded nearly three dozen. It was the first major suicide bombing in Islamabad in nearly three years and came amid a sharp rise in militant attacks across the country. 

Pakistani authorities have since announced the arrest of several suspects linked to the bombing, saying they were part of a cell with connections to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a Pakistani militant group separate from but ideologically aligned with the Afghan Taliban rulers in Kabul and responsible for hundreds of attacks across Pakistan over the past decade.

Officials, including Naqvi, have repeatedly accused Afghan nationals and sanctuaries across the border of involvement in recent attacks in the country, which have strained already fraught ties with Kabul, which denies the claims. 

“‎Mohsin Naqvi emphasized that negotiations and terrorist attacks cannot proceed simultaneously,” the interior ministry said in a statement after Naqvi met Baker in Islamabad. 

Naqvi’s comments to the US envoy come less than two weeks after peace talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan in Istanbul collapsed, with a Taliban spokesman saying negotiations had ended after Islamabad demanded Kabul take responsibility for Pakistan’s internal security and rein in anti-Pakistan militants operating from Afghan territory. Islamabad said the Afghan side showed “lack of commitment and seriousness” and had refused to provide written guarantees against cross-border attacks.

Although a ceasefire along the border formally remains in place, relations between the two neighbors have sharply deteriorated since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021. 

Naqvi also briefed Baker on the latest findings from the Islamabad bombing probe, saying the militants intended to target the court but were unable to enter due to security measures. All individuals involved in the attack have been traced, and the facilitators have been arrested, he said. 

“Acting US Ambassador condemned the suicide blast near the Islamabad court and expressed condolences to the families of the deceased. She also paid tribute to Pakistan’s sacrifices in the fight against terrorism,” the statement said. 

For Washington, the renewed violence and the breakdown of Pakistan-Afghanistan talks raise the stakes in a region where it has long supported counter-terrorism cooperation but now has limited on-the-ground presence after its 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan.