City
Epaper

Pakistan's reliance on low-cost Chinese drones limiting military capability: Report

By IANS | Updated: March 21, 2026 19:25 IST

Colombo, March 21 Pakistan, barred from the higher end of the Western defence market, pivoted to China not ...

Open in App

Colombo, March 21 Pakistan, barred from the higher end of the Western defence market, pivoted to China not solely out of strategic alignment but due to constrained choices, an arrangement Beijing has deliberately cultivated. The continued expansion of the relationship despite combat losses underscores Islamabad’s dependence on Beijing for advanced technologies rather than the merits of the systems, a report has highlighted.

“The structural logic of the partnership is not difficult to establish. American drones like the MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper are technologically more advanced, but Washington limits their export, especially to de facto allies of Beijing such as Pakistan. Excluded from the higher end of the Western market, Pakistan turned to China not purely out of strategic affinity, though that is a factor, but out of constrained choices. China, for its part, has actively cultivated this position,” a report in Sri Lankan newspaper 'Daily Mirror' detailed.

“The Wing Loong II has been primarily developed for export and marketed by Chinese developers as a cheaper alternative to the MQ-1 Predator, with a per-unit price estimated at around $1-2 million compared to, for example, the MQ-9 Reaper's $30 million. The price differential is real, and for a defence budget under persistent fiscal pressure, it matters. What is less clearly communicated in the marketing materials is what that price differential actually reflects in terms of performance,” it added.

According to the report, the CH-4B unmanned combat aerial vehicle procured from China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation and operated by Pakistan's Army Aviation and Navy – bears an external resemblance to the MQ-9 Reaper – a similarity long noted by analysts.

The comparability, however, it said, largely ends at the "silhouette", the report spotlighted.

“The CH-5, China's larger follow-on platform comparable to the Reaper, is equipped with an unidentified turbocharged piston engine with less than half the horsepower of the Garrett TPE331 turboprop mounted on the Reaper. This limits the CH-5's maximum altitude to 9 km, compared to the 12-15 km of the Reaper,” it noted.

The report further said, “Pakistan's drone programme is institutionally embedded in a way that will make it difficult to unwind regardless of how China-Pakistan relations evolve. But the capability it represents is more constrained than the volume of announcements surrounding it suggests. The price is low for a reason, the maintenance record is public, and the combat losses are documented.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalVenugopal asks CM Vijayan to explain secret meetings with top BJP leaders

CricketIPL 2026: KKR unveil a striking fan mural at Rash Behari Avenue in South Kolkata

MumbaiMumbai Fraud: Man Posing as BMC Official Held for Demanding Bribe Over Debris in Juhu

InternationalPM Modi congratulates To Lam on his election as Vietnam's President

InternationalBangladesh: Ex-Speaker Shirin Sharmin Chaudhury arrested in Dhaka

International Realted Stories

InternationalMEA bids farewell to Vatican envoy Archbishop Girelli, lauds role in strengthening ties

InternationalLeading activist highlights worsening human rights situation in Balochistan at UNHRC

InternationalIndia releases Rs 42.3 crore to Bhutan to support 13th Five-Year Plan projects

International"They are helpless now": Pak Senator Mushahid Hussain mocks UAE on loan repayment, warns it of 'Akhand Bharat' risk

InternationalPublic disillusionment grows: SFJ’s Khalistan push seen as money-making racket