It was quite obvious that when the plans of the Southwest Bureau and Shen Hoy were laid before the representatives of Pakistan, Hadik and his colleagues were almost drooling.
The more emotional Ba Shaxin even pointed directly at the image of the fighter jet and exclaimed excitedly, "With this, India's Su-30 is nothing!"
Hadik was equally thrilled, unable to hide his interest in the products offered by both companies. Not only were the proposals from the two companies very attractive, but the prices were also very friendly. Pakistan was not a wealthy country, and its economy was still very weak. Advanced fighter jets were not cheap, like those sold by the Eagle Sauce Family. The F-16, with a complete weapon system, could easily exceed one hundred million US dollars.
The fighter jets sold by Europe were even more expensive. Not to mention the Rafale or Typhoon, even the light fighter Gripen had sold to Brazil a few years ago at a price of 125 million US dollars each.