SLAMABAD: The Foreign Office on Sunday expressed ‘surprise’ at the Indian government’s ‘disappointment’ over the United States decision to sell eight F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan.
A ‘disappointed’ India on Saturday summoned the US envoy in New Delhi, Richard Verma, to ‘convey its displeasure’ regarding the Obama administration’s decision to notify the sale of the aircraft to Pakistan.
Indian Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar met the US ambassador at the ministry to convey India’s disapproval of the deal to Washington, in a meeting which lasted 45 minutes.
“Their army and arsenal stock is much larger and they are the largest importer of defence equipment,” Foreign Office Spokesman Nafees Zakaria said in a statement.
“With regards to the F-16s sale, Pakistan and the United States are closely cooperating in countering terrorism,” he said, adding that the US State Department Deputy Spokesman Mark Toner had earlier announced that the purpose of the sale was to enhance Pakistan’s precision strike capability.
It is in US security interests to support Pakistan’s counter-terrorism efforts, Toner had said.
The $699 million deal consists of eight Lockheed Martin F-16 fighter jets, along with training, radar and other equipment.
The F-16 aircraft will allow the Pakistan Air Force to operate in all kinds of weather, at night, as well as ‘enhance Pakistan’s ability to conduct counter-insurgency and counterterrorism operations’, the US Defence Security Cooperation Agency, which coordinates such foreign arms sales, said in a statement.
The proposed deal will now go through a 30-day notification period after which it will be finalised.