Debt for Jets: When Loans Start Flying
What happens when a country struggles with dollar liquidity but still needs air superiority? It doesn’t cancel defence ambitions—it innovates around them. The emerging “Debt for Jets” model, now quietly shaping South Asian and Middle Eastern military ties, signals a shift where sovereign debt, strategic loyalty, and defence exports intersect.
Two parallel developments underline this trend:
- Pakistan–Bangladesh talks around the JF-17 Thunder
- Pakistan–Saudi Arabia negotiations to convert loans into fighter jets
Together, they point to a new geopolitical reality: aircraft as balance-sheet instruments.
Pakistan–Bangladesh: Old Ties, New Airframes
In early January, Bangladesh Air Force Chief Hasan Mahmood Khan arrived in Pakistan for high-level meetings with Air Chief Marshal Zaheer Ahmed Baber Sidhu. Discussions centered on:
- JF-17 Thunder multirole fighters
- Super Mushshak trainer aircraft
- Aerospace training, cyber, and ISR cooperation
The Bangladeshi delegation visited Pakistan’s National ISR Centre and Cyber Command, and held meetings with Pakistan’s naval and army leadership, including Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir.
No formal contract has been signed yet—but the direction is clear. Bangladesh is modernising, and Pakistan is positioning itself as a cost-effective, politically flexible supplier.
