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Oh common... Indonesia already has been harrassed enough by a rag tag papnew nenui now China is harrassing you on a daily basis and your incapable. With such a large economy your air force, army, navy is almost incapable yet you come here to brag about "wind tunnels" the chinese here would laugh on you far more than pakistani cuz they are so ignorant and into the number of medals their fake generals were.
Selçuk Bayraktar has a brilliant academic career. He completed his second master's degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a scholarship on the aggressive maneuver control of unmanned aerial vehicles. During this period, he worked as an assistant to Professor George Pappas and Professor Eric Feron. He conducted scientific studies on UAV formation flight experiments, ground, and air coordinated robot teams, flight control, and guidance systems, which were carried out for the first time in the world. He returned to Turkey in 2007 and became the technical manager of Baykar Defense.Isn't the guy behind Baykar industries Erdoğan's son in law?? There was some controversy about that or just western propaganda?
Oh yeah bro I understand very clearly the internal dynamics of Turkish politics. The hardcore secular folks vs people who want reasonable balance between Islam secularism. Which is often turned into AKP/Erdoğan vs CHP/other Left Wing parties etc. Where Erdoğan is sheytan for the left wing lmao .Selçuk Bayraktar has a brilliant academic career. He completed his second master's degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a scholarship on the aggressive maneuver control of unmanned aerial vehicles. During this period, he worked as an assistant to Professor George Pappas and Professor Eric Feron. He conducted scientific studies on UAV formation flight experiments, ground, and air coordinated robot teams, flight control, and guidance systems, which were carried out for the first time in the world. He returned to Turkey in 2007 and became the technical manager of Baykar Defense.
But, Baykar Makina has been developing its expertise on UAV systems for about 20 years. Since 2004, it has been carrying out these development activities directly within the Turkish armed force. Selçuk and Haluk brothers were worked in the field together with military personnel, during the years when the fight against terrorism was intense. In other words, they continued to develop their systems directly in the operational environment. He played a leading role in the development of flight control, avionic system architecture, navigation algorithms, system kinematics and dynamics, embedded software development, and electronic hardware development of unmanned aerial vehicles during his Baykar career.
Selçuk Bayraktar married with Sümeyye Erdoğan (Erdoğan's daughter) in 2016. In short, yes, he is Erdogan's son-in-law, but Baykar Makina is a 40-year-old company that started working on UAV before Erdogan came to power. It's not a widely known topic, but 20012-2015 were very difficult years for Baykar Machine and there were even a number of bureaucratic problems. The acceptance tests of the first tactical system were quite painful. The political climate in Turkey after 2016 is a completely different discussion. If you have an intellectual interest, we can discuss it on a separate topic.
In terms of realpolitik; After 2016, Baykar Makine entered a much more comprehensive development trend without getting caught in bureaucratic obstacles.
Long story short, this is so prominent that there are frequent debates in Turkish defense forums about "TAI UAV system development activities are pushed into the background due to Baykar." While there are some developments that support these arguments(press attention, TB-2 order numbers, giving the Akıncı project to Baykar, etc.), It often a daily political dispute which aimed to politicize and eroded the company.
Oh common... Indonesia already has been harrassed enough by a rag tag papnew nenui now China is harrassing you on a daily basis and your incapable. With such a large economy your air force, army, navy is almost incapable yet you come here to brag about "wind tunnels" the chinese here would laugh on you far more than pakistani cuz they are so ignorant and into the number of medals their fake generals were.
Pakistan in 2016: "Everything in Turkey's actually Western origin. No point in working with them on anything. And no one cares about South African stuff."
Pakistan in 2021: "Can we buy Turkish drones and Emirati-South African mini-drones?"
Honestly, what a nation. We literally could have co-developed this stuff from them and not ask this question, "can we buy?"
I don't give our decision-makers enough credit to have trust deficits with anyone -- for a country that repeatedly asks for US equipment, I doubt there's a 'trust deficit' issue.
Rather, it has more to do with a very limited vision and a penchant to constantly defer to big suppliers in the West and China.
In fact, even if we start buying lots of Turkish gear now, we are still missing "the point."
The point wasn't to buy from Turkey (or Ukraine or South Africa), but to co-develop weapons and critical inputs (e.g., engines) with those countries.
The point was to make the TAI Anka the TAI-PAC Anka, or the TAI ATAK-2 into the TAI-PAC ATAK-2, not to buy the Anka or ATAK-2. Yes, I understand we have a limited budget, but shipping that money out to some other country and then perpetually rely on that country for supplies (and ship out even more USD) is not a solution. The solution is to redirect that wealth (however limited) to domestic solutions.
Now, I'm sure our generals will say, "well our bloody civilians don't know how to make anything," and I'm sure our engineers will say, "our bloody generals don't know anything."
Fair, but we should undergo that argument, in the open. Too bad we don't have policy people to facilitate that exchange and to line up the facts and arguments from both sides to come up with the best solution.
Yeah but they're developing the engines as we speak, so in 3-5 years even those won't be an issue. Hilariously, the Turks are working with Ukraine on UAV engines. Ukraine is the other country which wanted to work with us on aerospace, but our heads were up Russia's rear that time (God knows why).
I was basically the only person saying in 2016 that we should work with Turkey, South Africa and Ukraine. We Pakistanis would sell the cave without checking if it's a salt mine first, and then complain why others were selling our salt.
Given Pakistani history, that's just not possible.I would suggest structural changes, PAK should put defense companies under civilian rule (SOE ministry) rather than Armed Force. Imran Khan should also be blamed, as a leader why he doesnt use his power to intervene in the military procurement and military program.
Indonesia for example seen as not buying anything during Jokowi administration, it is because he focuses the budget to buy what the local industry can make like ships, rifle, and others. It will be likely a disaster if we let Armed force decide which weapons they are going to buy. Just recent news reveal our Armed Force wanting to buy 36 Rafale and 36 F 15 EX, but the government only approve 1.6 billion USD for new fighters and it is still under assessment.
There should be law prohibiting foreign equipment to be bought when local supplier can make similar equipment. PAK decision to buy China VT 4 tanks instead of upgraded Alkhalid shows that you need the law to be made as soon as possible.
I seriously doubt Pakistan will buy Turkish drones as it would be killing our local efforts which have progressed really far, its too late to buy something off the shelf now. What PAF is doing is probably what it did with Saab Gripen, we evaluated it like a buyer and incorporated its features onto our own product. What we will probably do is get some sub systems/software or munitions from them. Turkish drones have worked well in Azerbaijan conflict so worth studying them as force multipliers.Pakistan in 2016: "Everything in Turkey's actually Western origin. No point in working with them on anything. And no one cares about South African stuff."
Pakistan in 2021: "Can we buy Turkish drones and Emirati-South African mini-drones?"
Honestly, what a nation. We literally could have co-developed this stuff from them and not ask this question, "can we buy?"
Before I pen these thought please allow me to say that my thoughts are not directed at ANYONE but the gist of the posts that are doing the rounds.I don't give our decision-makers enough credit to have trust deficits with anyone -- for a country that repeatedly asks for US equipment, I doubt there's a 'trust deficit' issue.
Rather, it has more to do with a very limited vision and a penchant to constantly defer to big suppliers in the West and China.
In fact, even if we start buying lots of Turkish gear now, we are still missing "the point."
The point wasn't to buy from Turkey (or Ukraine or South Africa), but to co-develop weapons and critical inputs (e.g., engines) with those countries.
The point was to make the TAI Anka the TAI-PAC Anka, or the TAI ATAK-2 into the TAI-PAC ATAK-2, not to buy the Anka or ATAK-2. Yes, I understand we have a limited budget, but shipping that money out to some other country and then perpetually rely on that country for supplies (and ship out even more USD) is not a solution. The solution is to redirect that wealth (however limited) to domestic solutions.
Now, I'm sure our generals will say, "well our bloody civilians don't know how to make anything," and I'm sure our engineers will say, "our bloody generals don't know anything."
Fair, but we should undergo that argument, in the open. Too bad we don't have policy people to facilitate that exchange and to line up the facts and arguments from both sides to come up with the best solution.
what about new ACm? is just on seniority based? and some argued ha has ~2k flying hours and spent most of the time heading research groups? I mean it is a sign of change as his appointment took input from the prv ACM?