China Seeking To Offload Surplus Military Aircraft
The Shenyang JH-7A can carry a variety of
precision-guided weapons including anti-ahip and anti-radar missiles. (Photo:
Vladimir Karnozov)
China is intent on selling off a number of
technologically advanced aircraft, including radar platforms and interdiction
and attack aircraft that apparently have fallen short of People's Liberation
Army Air Force (PLAAF) expectations after just a few years of operational
service. After being decommissioned, the aircraft have been handed over to Poly
Technologies, a company licensed by the government, for rework into exportable
versions and subsequent release to would-be foreign clients.
During the
12th China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition, better known as
Airshow China 2018, held earlier this month in Zhuhai, the company had a large
outdoor exhibition to showcase its wares. Large-format banners and posters were
devoted to the KJ-200, JH-7, A-5, J-7, and K-8, describing them as
decommissioned equipment available to interested foreign countries after repair,
upgrade, and rebuild.
While the Chengdu J-7 and Hongdu A-5 and K-8 have
been in PLAAF service for many years and are considered obsolete, the KJ-200 and
JH-7 represent modern and still highly capable aircraft. Most intriguing is the
offer of the Shaanxi KJ-200 airborne early warning aircraft, which entered PLAAF
service as recently as 2009. Based on the platform of the Shaanxi Y-8, a
localized Antonov An-12 transport, the KJ-200 features a large active
electronically scanned array (AESA) radar mounted above the fuselage in a manner
resembling the Saab Erieye. According to Poly Technologies, the system can
detect, identify, and track aerial and seagoing targets with a compensation for
ground clutter, and provides situational awareness, command, and control
functions.
It seems that a handful of KJ-200s have become redundant after
the more advanced KJ-500, based on the evolved Y-9 platform, became operational
in 2015. While similar in dimensions, the newer 65-tonne-gross weight aircraft
is attributed to the next generation and differs in having a non-rotating
circular dome with three AESA arrays in place of the KJ-200's balanced beam
antenna.
Poly Technologies is also promoting the Shenyang JH-7
interdiction aircraft that has had a production run of some 270 copies, most of
which remain operable. Developed in the 1980s, the initial version gave ground
for development of the far more advanced JH-7А, which became operational in
2004. Apart from being China's first computer-aided design, the 28.5-tonne jet
featured a glass cockpit and digital fly-by-wire flight control system. Most of
the earlier airframes were upgraded to the JH-7A standard.
Poly
Technologies describes the aircraft as a twin-engine, tandem-seat, supersonic
fighter-bomber able to carry a bombload of up to 6.5 tonnes and capable of
long-range strikes with precision-guided munitions. The type was briefly
marketed for export as the FBC-1 Flying Leopard, but all production examples
went to the PLAAF and PLANAF (Chinese naval aviation). Now, with Shenyang having
mastered production of the Sukhoi Su-30 twin-seat multirole fighter as the J-16,
the JH-7A is being phased out and thus has become available for
export.
Unlike the JH-7, the Hongdu Q-5 low-level attack aircraft was
delivered new not only to the PLAAF (from 1970) but also to Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Sudan, Myanmar, and North Korea, with the export designation A-5.
Last year, the type was withdrawn from Chinese service but remains active with
the last three of the overseas customers mentioned. These and others may be
interested in acquiring the A-5L, the most advanced version with the ability to
use laser-guided bombs.
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