China’s J-35: Pakistan’s leap forward
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
CHINA’S decision to showcase the J-35A stealth fighter on state television was no routine broadcast. It was a deliberate signal—an announcement of intent and a harbinger of change in South Asia’s strategic landscape. For Pakistan, the message was unmistakable: Beijing is ready to export its most advanced combat aircraft and Islamabad is poised to become its first recipient. This would mark Pakistan’s entry into the fifth-generation era, reshaping deterrence and altering the balance of airpower in the region. Chinese technology has already transformed Pakistan’s arsenal. The co-developed JF-17 Thunder gave Islamabad an affordable multirole fighter, while the induction of the J-10CE equipped with PL-15 long-range missiles credibly countered India’s much-touted Rafale fleet. The limited skirmish of May 2025—remembered as Marka-e-Haq—reinforced this point. In that confrontation, Pakistan Air Force units employing Chinese aircraft delivered a telling blow to the supposedly superior Indian Air Force, validating both PAF’s prowess and Chinese technology in combat. Western options remain closed to Islamabad. The F-35 is politically inaccessible, financially prohibitive and appeared vulnerable in the recent US-Iran conflict; Russia’s Su-57 is unproven and diplomatically complicated. That leaves China’s J-35 as the only viable path to stealth capability. Yet Pakistan’s interest extends beyond the aircraft itself. Beijing is offering a broader ecosystem: the J-35 paired with KJ-500 airborne early warning aircraft and HQ-19 missile defence systems. Together, this package would multiply Pakistan’s lethality, survivability and operational reach, creating South Asia’s first integrated fifth-generation combat capability. It is not merely a purchase; it is a transformation. The J-35, however, is not a plug-and-play replacement for legacy fighters. As a twin-engine stealth platform with internal weapons bays, advanced avionics and radar-absorbent coatings, it imposes unique infrastru