I never said China is incapable of manufacturing effective turbofan engines in the future. They are still working on it right now.
I agree with you. They have developed some engines, installed many Taihang engines on their J-11B series fighters, and working on more powerful engines for other aircrafts.
And I have said earlier that given the engine is an American design, it will inevitably have political strings attached to it. These are often complex and add additional costs to acquiring the aircraft and other critical components.
And there is the AMRAAM BVR missile. Something the Americans do not easily sell to anyone. Though, Gripen would be able to fire the Meteor in the near future. But again, it'd be a question of money.
*sigh*
See, some people in this country equate such complex procurement to buying rice from the local bazaar. And there's the reason for why everything in this country is out of control ranging from our ridiculous loan from Russia to other issues.
Agreed with you on all counts. My response was intended to the OP, though any Bangladeshi can respond if they wish, using facts and logic, of course.
As for Meteor, it's not even completed development, and it's not even Swedish but an MBDA-product (joint Euro development), which means lots of possible strings they can pull in times of crisis, which effectively makes it useless on at least two counts (one: it's not even operational, no idea on when it would mature; two: lots of strings can be pulled by non-SAAB units even though SAAB would probably be doing the sales pitch, in this hypothetical case).
All things considered, we should lean more on the Dragon's shoulder for the foreseeable future (next two decades) while lunging towards the Bear from time to time, and constraining the Bear by upgrading our ground based SAM, aerial AAM, and other systems in Ukraine and the likes. Besides that, we should encourage ToT, joint development and production, and closer cooperation with the likes of Indonesia and Turkey openly, and Iran for SSM designs and technologies (no complete systems needed, and without transfer of complete systems, it would be harder for foreign intel to track these procurements if we play our cards right).