Windjammer
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Remember reading a very old copy of Air Enthusiast which claimed that PAF was keen on the F-4 Phantoms in the early 70s. As for F/A 18s, it was also the price which was a big minus said to be 1.5 of the F-16 and didn't it also have a design fault which resulted in corrosion to the both tail resulting in having to add strakes on the upper fuselage to break the flow of air .The PAF was looking for a new attack aircraft in the 1970s. It originally selected the A-7, but when the US canned the deal, the PAF approached the UK and France about the Jaguar. Even though India was getting the Jaguar, the UK/France were happy to sell it to Pakistan, and the PAF was happy to pick it up. However, because of the PAF's larger requirements, the program was too expensive.
Though Carter didn't greenlight the F-16 or F-18L to Pakistan, he did offer to facilitate a loan for France to sell the Mirage F-1 and Mirage 2000 to the PAF. So, if not for the F-16, the PAF would've likely gone for that combination. By that point, Dassault had configured the F-1 into a decent attack aircraft, and the Mirage 2000 was a promising air-to-air platform.
Even when the F-16 entered the picture, the PAF was actually still interested in the A-7. The latter was a true strike-optimize design and many of its core features wouldn't be in the F-16 until Block-40/42. However, we just couldn't afford both platforms, and, ultimately, the PAF decided to look ahead to the growth of the F-16. That said, if money wasn't an issue, the PAF would've ordered both the F-16 and A-7 back in the 1980s.
Fun fact: The PAF had even asked for the F/A-18 back in the 1980s (see WikiLeaks). However, the U.S. said it wasn't available for sale at the time, but the PAF learned enough about the fighter to know that it would've been an excellent multirole design.
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