Pakistan’s ‘combat tested’ jets boost weapons sales

Officials inspect the cockpit of a JF17 Thunder fighter jet during the International Defence Exhibition and Seminar "IDEAS 2022" in Karachi, Pakistan November 16, 2022. (Reuters/ file)
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Updated 20 January 2026
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Pakistan’s ‘combat tested’ jets boost weapons sales

  • Talks underway with at least 13 countries for JF-17 jets, drones and weapons, with several negotiations at an advanced stage.
  • Analysts say Ukraine and Middle East wars have driven demand for cheaper, non-Western arms despite geopolitical risks.

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s defense manufacturing industry is running red hot since its jets, drones and missiles earned the coveted ‘combat tested’ tag in a conflict with India last year, attracting a slew of interested buyers.

Islamabad has held talks with 13 countries, six to eight of which are in an advanced stage, for deals involving JF-17 jets made jointly with China as well as training aircraft, drones, and weapons systems, said three Pakistani sources who have knowledge of defense sales.

Pakistan’s military and defense ministry did not provide details on any deals but the country’s defense production minister confirmed that several countries were interested in jets and other military equipment.

China’s defense ministry did not respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

Analysts believe countries are searching for new supply chains following disruptions caused by the war in Ukraine and conflict in the Middle East. Pakistan’s weapons have become a viable alternative after they were tested in a massive air battle with India in May, in which Pakistan’s air force squadrons flew JF-17s alongside the advanced Chinese-made J-10s.

Reuters spoke to six sources privy to defense deals, three retired air force officials, and a dozen analysts who provided insight into Pakistan’s rising weapons industry, including unreported details of negotiations.

While some expressed skepticism about whether Pakistan could navigate geopolitical pressures and increase production capacity, there was consensus that interest in Pakistani military hardware had ‌surged. However, most analysts ‌cautioned talks would not necessarily lead to signed deals.

“These talks are taking place (but) they can fall through due ‌to ⁠international pressures,” Defense Production ‌Minister Raza Hayat Harraj told Reuters, terming any negotiations “guarded secrets.”

“There are a lot of queries but we are negotiating,” he said, adding interest had been expressed in air force equipment, ammunition and training.

Harraj also stressed the price difference between Pakistani jets and weapons and alternatives made in the US and Europe. While some Western options may be more technologically advanced, they cost more than three times as much as an approximately $30 million to $40 million JF-17.

GROWING LIST OF BUYERS
The sources said countries engaged in talks include Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Morocco, Ethiopia, and Nigeria as well as the government in eastern Libya led by Khalifa Haftar. Discussions on JF-17s and other weapons with Bangladesh and Iraq have been publicly acknowledged by Pakistan’s military, although more details have not been made public.

Almost all the potential buyers are Muslim-majority nations, like Pakistan. Many are from the predominantly Muslim Middle East, where Pakistan ⁠has historically been a security provider.

Asim Suleiman, a retired Air Marshal who remains briefed on defense sales, said “there are also three African countries lined up” as buyers, which do not include deals with the Libyan National Army ‌and Sudan previously reported by Reuters.

Three defense sources said among the most advanced talks is a ‍wide-ranging arms, defense cooperation and intelligence-sharing deal with Bangladesh, which gained independence from Pakistan ‍after the 1971 civil war.

The talks include JF-17 Block III multi-role fighter jets, MFI-17 Mushshak aircraft, Pakistani-made drones including the Shahpar reconnaissance and attack UAVs, air ‍defense systems, and Mohafiz mine-resistant armored vehicles, two of the sources said.

GROWING SUPPLY CHAIN
A key hurdle will be whether Pakistan can scale production of the JF-17, which has become the cornerstone of its weapons production program, with training aircraft and drones also in demand.

Suleiman said that by the end of 2027 Pakistan’s jet production rate will increase significantly, even possibly double from the current 20 or so aircraft manufactured annually, due to upgrades and expansions at the main factory.

Analysts said there were few visible constraints on increasing defense manufacturing and with backing from Beijing, Pakistan should be able to overcome most hurdles.

Pakistan “is becoming more relevant as a flexible, mid-tier provider of defense capacity,” said Andreas Krieg, a lecturer at King’s College London’s security studies department.

“It can train forces, provide advisers, run joint exercises, support maritime operations, and offer ⁠a menu of cost-effective platforms. For fragile African partners, that combination can be attractive: it is faster than Western capacity-building, less politically encumbered, and often cheaper.”

Partnerships with a rising private sector specializing in defense, particularly drones, will also speed up growth.

At Sysverve Aerospace in the city of Rawalpindi, where Pakistan’s army also has its headquarters, workers build hundreds of kamikaze and reconnaissance drones a year that are primarily supplied to the military.
“The trend in the army is naturally moving toward engaging the private sector,” company director Saad Mir told Reuters.

THE CHINA QUESTION
Siemon Wezeman, a senior arms transfer researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, said it was unclear how many reported talks over JF-17 sales would firm into hard deals, adding that Beijing could object to sales to certain clients.

While Pakistan was a natural partner for China to market the aircraft across the Middle East and Africa, “it’s the ones to Sudan and Libya that are really problematic.”

Both Libya and Sudan’s Darfur region are subject to UN arms embargoes.

Alongside juggling ties with China, Pakistan is navigating Middle East tensions between allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Islamabad has signed a mutual defense pact with Riyadh and is discussing another defense agreement involving Saudi Arabia and Turkiye, although details have not been made public.

“On the ideological side, Islamabad is more aligned with Saudis on overall narrative,” said Emadeddin Badi from the Global Initiative Against Transnational ‌Organized Crime.

“But where things get murkier is on the business, ports, mineral sides, all those supply chains are very much dominated by UAE, that’s where the battle is playing out and Saudis have to play catch-up.”


Uzbekistan president arrives in Pakistan to increase trade, defense, energy cooperation

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Uzbekistan president arrives in Pakistan to increase trade, defense, energy cooperation

  • Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev leads high-level delegation of ministers, business leaders on Feb. 5-6 visit, says state media 
  • Visit takes place days after Pakistan, Uzbekistan reaffirmed $2 billion trade target during intergovernmental commission meeting

ISLAMABAD: Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev arrived in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad on Thursday, with a high-level delegation to identify new avenues for bilateral cooperation in trade, defense, energy and other avenues, state-run media reported. 

The visit takes place after the 10th session of the Pakistan–Uzbekistan Intergovernmental Commission (IGC) on Trade, Economic and Scientific-Technical Cooperation was held in Islamabad on Feb. 2. Both sides reaffirmed their $2 billion trade target and agreed to push for regional connectivity, develop trade routes and accelerate cooperation in several sectors. 

Mirziyoyev was given a red-carpet welcome when his aircraft landed at the Nur Khan Airbase, the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said. He was welcomed by President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and senior members of the cabinet. 

“Discussions will focus on reviewing the entire gamut of bilateral relations and identifying new avenues to further deepen cooperation in diverse sectors, including trade, energy, defense, education, people-to-people exchange and regional connectivity,” APP reported. 

The Uzbek president will meet President Zardari, hold delegation-level talks with Prime Minister Sharif, and address the Pakistan-Uzbekistan Business Forum during his visit. 

Mirziyoyev’s visit takes place two days after Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev arrived in Islamabad to hold talks on trade, business and connectivity. 

Pakistan and Kazakhstan signed 37 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and set a target of raising bilateral trade to $1 billion within a year during Tokayev’s visit. 

Pakistan and Uzbekistan have steadily increased economic ties in recent years as Islamabad seeks greater access to landlocked Central Asian markets, aiming to position itself as a regional transit and trade hub linking South Asia with Central Asia.

Pakistan was the first Central Asian partner with which Uzbekistan signed a bilateral Transit Trade Agreement, along with a Preferential Trade Agreement in March 2022, covering 17 items, which became operational in 2023.

Pakistan’s finance ministry said last month that Azerbaijan’s state energy company SOCAR was set to finalize an investment in the country’s oil and gas sector following high-level engagements at the World Economic Forum in Davos.