Islamabad and Moscow signed
an agreement for the purchase of four MI-35 Hind gunships.
In a move possibly inspired
by the deepening of U.S.-India defense cooperation, Russia decided to approve
the sale of four Mi-35M attack helicopters to Pakistan The Express Tribune reports.
“An agreement was signed between Pakistan and Russian authorities in
Rawalpindi for the purchase of four Mi-35 helicopters,” according to a senior
Pakistani military official quoted in The Express Tribune.
The
military official did not offer details on the planned delivery date of the
aircraft or the helicopters’ technical configuration. The deal was likely
concluded during Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif’s visit to Russia in
June of this year.
Initial
talks over the purchase of the helicopters were already held last June. “We are
currently holding consultations. We are talking about Mi-35 helicopters, we
plan to supply them at the request of the Pakistani anti-drug trafficking
agency,” a Russian official said back then.
Pakistan plans to officially use the helicopters to fight drug trafficking.
“Following
the results of the talks held earlier on helicopters, which Pakistan would like
to get from Russia, a draft contract on the delivery of four Mi-35M gunships
has been sent to the Pakistani side. Pakistan is now studying the document,” a
source within Russia’s state arms exporter Rosoboronexport told The Express
Tribune.
Last
June, Russia lifted a self-imposed arms embargo against Pakistan, in place
since the Soviet-Afghan War, although Moscow, according to Pakistan’s foreign
ministry, never fully adhered to it.
The
Mi-35M gunships will in all likelihood replace part of the Pakistani military’s
fleet of obsolete U.S. made AH-1 Cobra attack helicopters, which are primarily used for
counterinsurgency operations in the country.
The
Mi-35M attack helicopter, the export version of the Mi-24 gunship, was
developed by the Mil Moscow Helicopter Plant and has been produced in Russia
since 2005. Next to serving in the Russian military, the aircraft has been
exported to Azerbaijan, Brazil, Iraq, and Venezuela.
The
company website of Russian Helicopters notes that the Mi-35 is particularly
suited for mountainous terrain and can be deployed “round the clock” in adverse
weather conditions. The website notes that the helicopter offers “combat use of
guided and unguided weapons in regular and challenging climate conditions” and
is “operational for attack flights at altitudes of 10-25 m daytime and 50 m at
night over land or water.”
The
helicopter can be deployed for a host of different missions, including
transporting up to eight paratroopers and carrying military supplies weighing
up to 1,500 kg internally and 2,400 kg externally. The Diplomat
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