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Pakistan gave China access to 'stealth' chopper from Bin Laden raid: Report

TRY THIS IT WILL HELP FEW WHO R HAVING TROUBLE DIGESTING THIS CO-OP NEWS BETWEEN 2 FRIENDLY COUNTRIES ...................
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Pakistan did right job who we can refuse Chinese request when they share every thing with us
we also share those drones which were destroyed in Pakistan
 
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Ofcourse... Since Pakistani pilots already fly SU-30s(J-11s), India's frontline fighter, in China - India deserves to find out a few secrets of ours.

Perhaps India should press the US to share JF-17, J-10, and J-2X secrets with it, perhaps the US will be willing to share.
Sure why not, plus the information transmiitted by bugged f_16 fighters. And left over orions.
 
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Pakistan didn't violate any agreement by letting Chinese friends have its samples. So puck Americans and give d@m to their $hit. How cares what they say. The worst they could do was to sanction us and they already have. What's next? WAR? HAHA!

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I dont why Chinese and Pakistanis are jumping ....... u r stealing technology developed by someone else its a shame on ur part........and Chinese says we are not copycats
It is india and not china which is called the world largest industrial cloning country.
 
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Why should Pakistan not?

Off topic:

I think China should shelter Taliban/AQ leaders the next time around. At least, US wont be able to launch such a covert operation again. :D
 
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If the need arises countries will use ICBMs too. There was no other way USA was going to get Osama Bin Laden.
Sure, but everything has consequences. Using ICBM will get you the same in return. Violating other's airspace and you put your own technology at risk of leak.

Can't have the cake and eat it too.
 
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I dont why Chinese and Pakistanis are jumping ....... u r stealing technology developed by someone else its a shame on ur part........and Chinese says we are not copycats
A burglar left his tools at the crime scene, and he is in no position to blame others for taking his tools. Maybe in India the burglar is right? Weird place.
 
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China already got plenty of info
Indian-American sold B-2 stealth tech to China: US
WASHINGTON: The US on Wednesday accused an Indian-American B-2 stealth bomber engineer Noshir Gowadia of selling classified defence secrets to China, a charge rejected by his lawyer, saying such "meaningless" information is already in the public domain.

The government says Gowadia sold classified US defence secrets about the sophisticated B-2 stealth bomber to China for less than USD 85,000.

Gowadia's lawyer says the information is meaningless because the Air Force already had released it and the intelligence did not help the Chinese at all, the Honolulu Star reported.

Lawyers for the government and Gowadia presented opening statements to the jury on Tuesday in the espionage trial of the man who marketed himself as the father of the B-2 bomber. The trial is expected to run into July.

Gowadia, 66, is facing charges that he helped the Chinese develop a cruise missile capable of evading heat-seeking air-to-air missiles. He is also facing charges that he sent classified information to the Swiss government and businesses in Israel and Germany, as well as money laundering and tax evasion.

From 1967 to 1986 he worked for giant defence contractor Northrop Corp., where he helped design the B-2's unique propulsion system. He then formed his own business, continuing to work with the US military.

In 1992 the government's Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded him a contract to try to find ways to reduce the visibility of water vapor trails left by jet engines.

When the government expanded the project without him, Gowadia got angry and wrote letters to government officials and his congressman trying to get back on the project, said federal prosecutor Kenneth Sorenson.

Defence lawyer David Klein said Gowadia wanted to resume work on the project because he "felt he could save American lives," adding, "He wanted to help his country as he did before."

Sorenson said Gowadia was angry because he "felt disrespected in this country."

Gowadia bought some land on Maui in 1999. In 2003 he signed a construction contract to build a luxury home on a 2-acre site overlooking the ocean. He now faces forfeiture of the home to the government.

Sorenson said when an expected Australian contract fell through, Gowadia needed money to pay his mortgage, which was USD 14,000 per month by 2005. So Gowadia and a business associate approached the Chinese government, he said.

Indian-American sold B-2 stealth tech to China: US - The Times of India
 
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I dont why Chinese and Pakistanis are jumping ....... u r stealing technology developed by someone else its a shame on ur part........and Chinese says we are not copycats

Americans and Russians did the same after WW2...ever heard of Operation Paperclip? now be ashamed of ur ignorance
 
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