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India never asked them to sell us their drones, we’re buying better MQ-9 Predators.
India never asked them to sell us their drones, we’re buying better MQ-9 Predators.
Does it hurt? I’m guessing the CEO was simply parroting what the customer (pakistan) told them. Clearly they talked about why/how this acquisition really helps pakistan. He doesn’t have another frame of reference to make such a specific comment.shameless advertisement. article says winglong II is underperform that's why pakistan buys tb2. since when winglong II operational in pakistan? they bought em, but not one assemble yet. also, they are different class. one is turboprop high altitude drone with nearly 3x the payload vs small piston engine drone.
Wait, what?Sour grapes
indeep, those graps are sour, we dont need from proxy enemy country...we have vast market to chose the best that meets our requirement and budgetSour grapes
Sour grapes
It's Indian origin source, so don't take any word credible for it.I loved this article! So chinese drones are sort of like our resident chinese posters - “under performing and facing major service issues due to faulty systems and poor chinese supply chain”
I’ll blame the reporter on this one. Poor ceo was asked to comment on a possibility that was never even remotely in consideration. Plus, you really cannot piss off your actual customer. India would never go for Turkish stuff when we can get much better systems.
I think the CEO was responding to a financial journalist who asked if the company will sell the drones to India.
Does it hurt? I’m guessing the CEO was simply parroting what the customer (pakistan) told them. Clearly they talked about why/how this acquisition really helps pakistan. He doesn’t have another frame of reference to make such a specific comment.
Wait, what?
Solidify said: It's Indian origin source, so don't take any word credible for it.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Editor-s-Pi...y-role-in-any-Taiwan-conflict-Turkey-s-BaykarBayraktar disclosed that he had learned from an official of a nation that had bought Chinese drones that the devices turned around once they reached the Chinese border. The official believed that the drone technology prevented them from entering Chinese airspace.
If true, these hidden restrictions would be “completely unacceptable,” according to Bayraktar.
Pakistan purchased a significant number of Chinese-made drones before purchasing TB2 drones. Asia Nikkei quoted one of Oryx’s writers, conflict expert Stijn Mitzer, as saying, “I have no information that suggests Pakistan is unhappy with their Chinese armed drones, but one could argue that if they were happy, there was no need to buy another platform.”