Tag Archive | "Pakistan Air Force"

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PAF A-5c Fantan flying over Pishawar

Posted on 12 March 2012 by Tea Server

PAF Twin ship A-5 c Fantan Formation flying over Pishawar.

The A-5C Fantan is export designation of the Chinese designed J-5
(Attack aircraft 5), which is a twin-jet attack aircraft, derived from
J-6/Mig-19 earlier produced in the People’s Republic of China.

According to one report, at least 210 Fantan-As were in
service with the PLA Air Force by 1979, serving with tactical attack
squadrons of the People’s Liberation Army.

A 1980 report declared that the aircraft had been built in
relatively large numbers, and it is known to serve also in an air
defence role with the air arms of the PLA Navy. The total number in
Chinese service in now probably in the region of 500-800.

Deliveries of an initial batch of 52 export A-5′s to the
Pakistan Air Force began in February 1983 and have been completed.

The configuration of the PAF’s A-5′s differs considerably
from that of their Chinese counterparts, several design features having
been introduced at Pakistan’s request to increase the aircraft’s strike
range and enable it to carry several additional types of weapons.

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Chengdu J-10 in Paf colors

Posted on 02 March 2012 by Tea Server

Chengdu J-10 in Paf colors.

In late-February 2006, the President of Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf, toured the J-10 and JF-17 production facilities during which the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) was offered the J-10,[18]
and the purchase of 36 J-10s was approved on 12 April 2006. The J-10s
would be modified to Pakistani requirements, and would equip PAF
squadrons quantity around 150 to 200 from 2014–2015 and be known as the
FC-20.

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F-16s Replace Americans At Jacobabad Airbase

Posted on 02 March 2012 by Tea Server



 

The Pakistan Air Force (PAF), in a significant move, has
equipped the newly renovated Jacobabad airbase with close to three dozen
F-16s, including the advanced Block 52+ version of the aircraft.

Pakistan has spent over $3.75 billion on both the revamping of
Jacobabad airbase and the acquisition of new planes, officials told. The air force is in a better position to encounter any

Syndicated from: ASIAN DEFENCE NEWS

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500th Serial Production Jf-17 in Special Marking v1.2

Posted on 25 February 2012 by Tea Server

v1.2 0f earlier photo here.

This JFT is painted in special markings to commemorate the 500th
production plane from PAC Kamra, also paying homage to Baba Quaid e
Azam, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, also known as “J-the Mystery Man”, whose
vision led to the carving of Pakistan on the face of the sub-continent,
which then led to co-operation between Pakistan and China and ultimately
to Jf-17 Thunder project .

Also Note the paisa theme . Baba ji has been cropped from Rs. 500 Pakistani Ruppee Note and on Tires This Jf-17 has 1 Rupee like rims.

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500th Serial Production Jf-17 in Special Marking Photo

Posted on 25 February 2012 by Tea Server

This JFT is painted in special markings to commemorate the 500th production plane from PAC Kamra, also paying homage to Baba Quaid e Azam, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, also known as “J-the Mystery Man”, whose vision led to the carving of Pakistan on the face of the sub-continent, which then led to co-operation between Pakistan and China and ultimately to Jf-17 Thunder project .

Baba G zindabaaaaad……. !

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iPads made by Pakistan Air Force

Posted on 20 February 2012 by Tea Server

Mohammad Imran holds a Pakistani-made PACPad computer tablet at his electronics store in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Picture: AP

Rawalpindi – Inside a high-security air force complex that builds jet fighters and weapons systems, Pakistan’s military is working on the latest addition to its sprawling commercial empire: a homegrown version of the iPad.

It’s a venture that bundles together Pakistani

Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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Guns And Androids: Pakistan Air Force Making iPads

Posted on 20 February 2012 by Tea Server

By Chris Brummitt for The Associated Press

Inside a high-security air force complex that builds jet fighters and weapons systems, Pakistan’s military is working on the latest addition to its sprawling commercial empire: a homegrown version of the iPad.

It’s a venture that bundles together Pakistani engineering and Chinese hardware, and shines a light on the military’s controversial foothold in the consumer market. Supporters say it will boost the economy as well as a troubled nation’s self-esteem. It all comes together at an air force base in Kamra in northern Pakistan, where avionics engineers — when they’re not working on defense projects — assemble the PACPAD 1.

“The original is the iPad, the copy is the PACPAD,” said Mohammad Imran, who stocks the product at his small computer and cell phone shop in a mall in Rawalpindi, a city not far from Kamra and the home of the Pakistani army.

The device runs on Android 2.3, an operating system made by Google and given away for free. At around $200, it’s less than half the price of Apple or Samsung devices and cheaper than other low-end Chinese tablets on the market, with the bonus of a local, one-year guarantee.

The PAC in the name stands for the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex, where it is made. The PAC also makes an e-reader and small laptop.
Such endeavors are still at the pilot stage and represent just a sliver of the military’s business portfolio, which encompasses massive land holdings, flour and sugar mills, hotels, travel agents, even a brand of breakfast cereal.

The military is powerful, its businesses are rarely subject to civilian scrutiny, and it has staged three coups since Pakistan became a state in 1947. Many Pakistanis find its economic activities corrupting and say it should focus on entirely on defense.

“I just can’t figure it out,” said Jehan Ara, head of Pakistan’s Software Houses Association, said of the PACPAD. “Even if they could sell a billion units, I can’t see the point. The air force is supposed to be protecting the air space and borders of the country.”

Supporters say the foray into information technology is a boost to national pride for a country vastly overshadowed by archrival India in the high-tech field. Tech websites in the country have shown curiosity or cautious enthusiasm, but say it’s too early to predict how the device will perform. Skeptics claim it’s a vanity project that will never see mass production.

Only a few hundred of each products has been made so far, though a new batch will be completed in the next three months. “The defense industry is trying to justify its presence by doing more than just produce weapons,” said Ayesha Siddiqa, author of Military Inc., a critical study of military businesses. “Some smart aleck must have thought we can make some money here.”

PAC’s website at http://www.cpmc.pk says the goal is “strengthening the national economy through commercialization” and lauds the collaboration with China — something that likely resonates among nationalists.

China is regarded as a firm ally by Pakistan’s security establishment, whereas the U.S., despite pouring billions of dollars in aid into the country, is seen as fickle and increasingly as an enemy.

These perceptions have heightened as the U.S. intensifies drone attacks on militants based in the Pakistani borderlands. But the military is also a target of those militants. In 2007 the base at Kamra, home to 12,000 workers and their families, nine people died when a cyclist blew himself up at the entrance.

PAC officials suggested the program that produces the PACPAD was modeled in part on the Chinese military’s entry into commercial industry, which lasted two decades until it was ordered to cut back lest it become corrupted and lose sight of its core mission.

The tablet and other devices are made in a low-slung facility, daubed in camouflage paint, near, a factory that produces J-17 Thunder fighter jets with Chinese help.

“It’s about using spare capacity. There are 24 hours in a day, do we waste them or use them to make something?” said Sohail Kalim, PAC’s sales director. “The profits go to the welfare of the people here. There are lots of auditors. They don’t let us do any hanky-panky here.”

PAC builds the PACPAD with a company called Innavtek in a Hong Kong-registered partnership that also builds high-tech parts for the warplanes.
But basic questions go unanswered. Maqsood Arshad, a retired air force officer who is one of the directors, couldn’t say how much money had been invested, how many units the venture hoped to sell and what the profit from each sale was likely to be.

The market for low-cost Android tablets is expanding quickly around the world, with factories in China filling most of the demand. Last year, an Indian company produced the “Aakash” tablet, priced at $50, and sold largely to schoolchildren and students.

Arshad said a second-generation PACPAD would be launched in the next three months, able to connect to the Internet via cell phone networks and other improved features. He said the Kamra facility could produce up to 1,000 devices a day.

During a brief test, The tablet with its 7-inch screen appeared to run well and the screen responsiveness was sharp. “It seems good, but operation-wise I have to look into it,” said Mohammad Akmal, who had come to the store in Rawalpindi to check the product out. “Within a month or so, we will know.”

Filed under: China, India, Nuclear, Pakistan, Pakistan Army, Pakistanis, United States Tagged: Apple, China, Chinese, iPad, PAC, PACPAD, Pakistan Aeronautical Complex, Pakistan Air Force, Pakistan Army, Pakistan’s Software Houses Association, Samsung

Syndicated from: Pakistanis for Peace

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PAF Can Counter India’s New War Doctrine, Says PAF Air Chief

Posted on 17 February 2012 by Tea Server



PAF Chief of Air
Staff Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman has said that the Pakistan Air
Force can effectively counter India’s new war doctrine.

Talking
to the media here at the Shahbaz Air Base, the air chief said PAF has
modified its plan within the existing infrastructure in view of the new
war doctrine of India. The Indian Air Force, he said, has been given a
very crucial and critical role in India’s ‘Cold Start’ doctrine.

Suleman
told the media that the Shahbaz Air Base was totally in the control of
the Pakistan Air Force and existing hardware procured and being acquired
by the PAF was sufficient to fulfill its requirements. “We are in the
process of consolidating the hardware procured so far,” the air chief
said.

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Syndicated from: ASIAN DEFENCE NEWS

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PAF Receives F 16 from USA ( America )

Posted on 07 February 2012 by Tea Server

Islamabad—Pakistan Air Force (PAF) has received three more F-16 fighter jets from the United Sates on Monday. 

 A PAF spokesman said that Pakistan the F-16 fighter jets were handed over to Pakistan in a ceremony at Shahbaz Airbase. Among the

planes, two are upgraded F-16 while the third one is latest Block-52.

The three aircraft are part of the final batch of 18 F-16 block 52 aircraft

Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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Pakistan Army to produce Notebooks,Tablets, eBook Readers

Posted on 06 February 2012 by Tea Server

 Karachi: 

The newest entrant in the market for tablets and eBook readers – dominated by the likes of Apple, Amazon and Samsung – is none other than the Pakistani military.

The Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) Kamra, whose self-described mission is “to produce and support weapon systems for a high state of operational readiness of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF)”, has started up a new

Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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Pakistani warplanes pound militant hideouts, kills 20 Taliban

Posted on 02 February 2012 by Tea Server

Image for representative purpose – Agencies
Pakistani warplanes pounded militant hideouts in the northwestern tribal area before dawn on Wednesday, killing at least 20 Taliban insurgents, security officials said.
The jets targeted hideouts in the tribal Orakzai district and at least four compounds were hit, they said, in the latest surge of fighting between government security forces and

Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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Disciplined innovators: Will make JF-17s and sell Tablets too!

Posted on 28 January 2012 by Tea Server

First off, thanks to @AliZeeshanIjazfor sharing the following picture with me.



Now I am not sure what to make of this.We are all well aware of the Pakistan Armed Forces and its commercialinterests. I guess, getting into the business of knock off tablets,netbooks and ebook readers is just part of the evolutionary process.

However, there seems something verywrong with how a prominent state organization, in a period of resource paucity, has decided on its own to run a parallel commercial arm.

For one, Pakistan Aeronautical ComplexKamra, is a state funded organization which on its own accord has nowdecided to use its resources, in its own words, to “StrengthenNational Economy Through Commercialization”. Really? Since when isa nations economy strengthened through commercialization? Whose coffers will be “strengthened” from this venture? 

There also seems to be something verywrong, on how on the one hand our security analysts, op-ed writersand other retired officers bombard us day after day, on how ourmilitary is under resourced, and how we, as a grateful nation, shouldprovide what ever budgetary allocations they demand. They furtherargue how NATO’s presence in Afghanistan and India’s shopping spreeon military hardware is harming Pakistan’s ability to keep up,technologically speaking, with other actors in the neighbourhood.

So, in short, we are low on cash, and falling behind technologically! So why exactly are state resources being utilized to develop consumer products?
A press release states:

ChairmanPAC Air Marshal Farhat Hussain Khan therefore decided to optimallyutilize the facilities and resources of PAC to contribute instrengthening the national economy through commercialization.

Sohe can decide to use state resources for commercial purposes as hesees fit? 


Do our best minds, employed at PACKamra have nothing else to do? Are we flush with surplus resources to dable in side projects? Apparently, the radar system along the Western border isnt working, they can start by fixing that to begin with! 

Granted, these products appear to be aresult of a partnership between PAC Kamra and INNAVTEK China. Evenso, why are state resources being utilised for such activities? Wherewill the revenue generated from the sale of these products go? Whofinanced the start up of this project? Are these products unique andpatented, or are they cheap knockoffs of patented hardware which maypotentially open up PAC Kamra to claims of copyright infringement? Are serving PAF officers involved in developing these products? 

Further, the use of PAF fighters as a marketingtool cheapens the achievements of the PAF, and personally, I find itexploitative and cynical that those entrusted to defend us, usemartial imagery as a marketing tool.   

Now, there is no denying, a long history of military technology and expertise crossing over, and helping develop commercial products. However, given the state of the Pakistani economy, the current threats we face and the scarcity of resources; the fact that the PAF has decided that it has the time, resources and manpower to run a money making side project on the side as well, suggests to me, that the next time the military demands for increased budgetary allocations, we should ask them to flog more tablets and netbooks. 

Endnote: Please consider signing the following petition, against the increased hate filled rhetoric against the Ahmadiyya Community in Rawalpindi: http://www.change.org/petitions/stop-the-ongoing-anti-ahmadi-hate-campaign-in-rawalpindi

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Pakistan To Get Final Batch OF F-16′s From US

Posted on 21 January 2012 by Tea Server



The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) will receive 18 F-16 block 52 aircraft from
Lockheed Martin later this month as part of a foreign military sale
(FMS) of 36 F-16C/D block 50/52 aircraft announced in June 2005.

Under
the US-Pakistan F-16 programme, Lockheed was awarded a contract for 12
F-16C and six F-16D block 52 aircraft in December 2006. The delivery
comes at a time when military aid for Pakistan has been almost
completely halted by the US in the wake of a series of crises affecting
the bilateral relationship between the two nations.

Pakistan has
already received block 52 versions of the F-16 aircraft, which includes
day-night, all-weather and precision-attack capabilities. The compact
multirole, single-engine Lockheed Martin-built F-16 Fighting Falcon
aircraft has a high level of manoeuvrability, a top speed of 2,124km/h,
and can detect planes flying at very low altitudes. The F-16 block 52
aircraft provides additional fuel and payload capacity, improved
avionics and sensors, and colour cockpit displays with enhanced
pilot/vehicle interfaces.

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Syndicated from: ASIAN DEFENCE NEWS

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JF-17 B and MiG-25 : Hi, we are twins

Posted on 12 January 2012 by Tea Server

Inspired from Mig-25 double seater, Jf-17
MiG-25 double seater
Indian Air Force MiG-25

JF-17 B and MiG-25 : Hi, we are twins.

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