Hi!
@CriticalThought
I was casually going through this thread when I bumped in your remarks. And I feel that I must correct a few gigantic fallacies or your perception.
I believe, lack of any real scientific research(at least decent scientific research-- both publication in top notch journals and creation of intellectual property rights) coupled with sheer opaqueness in pakistani research establishment leads to a lot of jingoism and sometimes exaggerated claims. I wish to reiterate that ToT is a misnomer-- which is very poorly understood by many Pakistanis including those residing in west! There are various aspects of ToT and let me highlight some of those before pointing out as to why your remarks about India are not entirely true-
The entire ToT clause negotiated between two parties depend on what is on offer by the OEM. I repeat, no sane country would just hand over critical technologies to the purchasing party. That never happens in the real world. Besides, even if the ToT agreement has been signed, the assimilation of the technology depends a lot on the industrial maturity of the purchasing party-- for instance in the case of Agostas the french would have transfered the blueprint or design of sub to Pakistan, however various sub-system level components would still need to be sourced from France as Pakistan lacks the industry at home to even produce warship grade steel let alone special alloys for propellers or certain part of the submarine. This ToT exercise would have been far more fruitful if Pakistan really had some sort of industrial maturity. What I mean by Industrial maturity is the presence of both govt and private sector companies that can supply these sub-system level components(their own design) in any such venture.
As for India, you get to criticise because India happens to be much more transparent vis-a-vis Pakistan, if things were as transparent as they are in India--like every project getting audited by CAG and reported in public-- things would be very different. Yes it is true, that India spent billions of dollars in Su-30 program without getting any significant ToT-- but you need to understand the context of it, and that is these deals were negotiated in early-mid 90s, when the requirement was different and the emphasis on ToT was far lesser. Even then if you read CAG reports, India has indigenized a lot of sub-system level components in Su-30 program via her private industry. The extent of manufacturing taking place in India(for Su-30) is far greater than Pakistan(for JF-17). In India industry has matured to the level where it can support such a venture in at least sub-system level components-- this manifests in the form of avionics, landing gear, tyres, cabling to even engines to name a few. Not to mention the fact that AL-31 engine is also manufactured in India. And the level of indigenization achieved(In both aircraft and engine) can be read in numerous CAG reports.
India is inducting LCA in numbers, I dont know what made you think India doesnt have an indigenous fighter. Thankfully I have had opportunity to interact with test pilots and my own batch mates working in ADA, I know fair deal about the plane. A lot of reports that prop up in Indian media are planted to set up an atmosphere for imports. Kindly note that unlike Pakistan, India has the financial muscle to pay for the imports upfront and that attracts a lot of these companies. Sometimes these companies employ lesser than legal means to forward their case. As for the LCA, according to those who fly and those who have designed, the problems related to max AoA and STR have been long solved-- with max AoA being in excess of 26 degrees(as of 2014) and classified STR. We can surely have a nice elaborate discussion on the control design aspect of both LCA and JF-17 if you want. I have worked on nonlinear adaptive control and published papers in top notch aerospace journals.