Posted on 07/05/2010 7:35:25 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
Russia blocks sale of engines for Sino-Pak fighter jets
Moscow, July 5 (PTI)
Russia has blocked the sale of 100 RD-93 engines to China for FC-1, the joint Sino-Pak fighter, which could emerge as a rival for its MiG-29 fighter in the global markets, according to a report today.
"The new contract with China for the sale of 100 RD-93 engines has not been signed," Kommersant reported quoting its sources in the military-industrial complex.
The deal for the supply of second batch of 100 RD-93 manufactured by Moscow-based Chernyshev Machine building Plant for FC-1 (Pakistani version JF-17) was to be signed with China back in May, however, CEO of RAC MiG and Sukhoi Aircraft Holding Mikhail Pogosyan has torpedoed it, Kommersant business daily reported.
"One of the sources confirmed that Pogosyan has virtually blocked the deal with China by writing to the Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation (FSMTC) and Rosoboronexport (ROE) state arms exporter that FC-1 is a direct rival of Russian MiG-29 fighters in several foreign markets," the daily writes noting that Russian and Chinese fighters are in the race for an Egyptian contract.
"I am not against the re-export of individual technologies, but it should be done in agreement with the producers of finished-product, so that this re-export does not damage their interests," Pogosyan told Kommersant.
"Re-export is allowed by the government decision and we don't have a practice of consulting producers of finished products.
Under the inter-governmental bilateral agreement in November 2007 China was allowed to re-export RD-93 as part of FC-1 fighter to Egypt, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Saudi Arabia and Algeria," press service of state arms exporting monopoly ROE was quoted as saying by the daily.
The Kommersant reminds that Chernyshev Plant a part of United Engine Corporation has supplied 100 RD-93 engines to China under the USD 238 million deal signed in 2005. A framework agreement for the sale of 500 such engines for the Sino-Pak joint fighter was also signed at that time and Beijing was ready to buy up to 1,000 engines in over USD 3 billion, if Russia agreed to offer its modernised version with greater thrust.
Communist=Copycat
bump
plan B the WS-9 for Xian Aero Engine Group.
Plan B is the WS-13 engine. It’s already certified and in production. What this means is that the 2nd batch of Pakistani JF-17s will have less reliable Engines with higher maintenance costs, but still much better than nothing.
Now for the upcoming Egyptian Deal, I think it’s still very much a toss up between China and Russia.
The Mig-29 will have more reliable engines and a more powerful radar but it would be tied to the Russian weapons suite and an antiquated COBOL based software architecture. If the Egyptians wanted to modify capabilities on that plane they might have to call in Israeli or Swedish defense contractors.
The JF-17 is 20% cheaper than the Mig-29, and I think China might throw in extras such as elimination of software locks, or free weapons integration for both U.S and Chinese A2A missiles.
Bat plane sighted in Bejing?
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