Pakistan is aiming to find international buyers for its
prized Al-Khalid tank, after reaching an understanding with co-producer China to market the product together, a top military
official said on Sunday.
Heavy Industries, Taxila, and Beijing’s
Norinco signed a memorandum of understanding to this effect on Thursday during
the International Defence Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS) 2012, Director General
of Defence Export Promotion Organisation Major General Tariq Khan said.
“We are not in the business of selling t-shirts,” Khan said
during the closing ceremony of the exhibition, as newsmen pushed him to justify
claims about the event being a success. “It takes months and years of
negotiations to seal the agreements. This MoU will help us a lot.”
“We have also received orders for our unmanned aerial
vehicle (UAV), commonly known as a drone, which is used for intelligence
gathering by police and military in different parts of the world,” he added.
The Al-Khalid tank was developed in the 1990s. It is
equipped with a 125mm gun and has the capability to fire sophisticated
ammunition including missiles in both stationary and moving conditions.
For years, Pakistan
has been trying in vain to sell the product, while China
is also marketing a variant of Al-Khalid. Joint marketing with China
opens up potential markets that would otherwise have been difficult for Islamabad
to penetrate into, officials said. Under the deal, profit from the sale
will be mutually shared.
Major General Khan said selling heavy equipment like tanks
and aircraft is not easy as political considerations need to be taken into
account. “At times even if a country wants to buy something, the deal breaks
off because of some political angle.”
Foreign delegates who visited the exhibition will come back
with requests to test the military gear and equipment in coming months, he
said. “But I can assure you there has been a lot of interest in what we make.”
However, Khan said it was impossible to state in numbers the
size of deals made during the exhibition.
Military officials involved in international defence trade
say Pakistan is
continuously being sidelined because of its geopolitical situation.
Meanwhile, Minister for Defence Production Sardar Bahadur
Khan said another jointly developed product with China,
the JF-17 Thunder fighter plane, will be marketed soon as well.
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