Washington on Friday approved $125 million worth of support for Pakistan's F-16 warplanes, and also $670 worth of support for India's C-17 transport planes.
Approval to support US-built aircraft for the two south Asian rivals were approved by the US State Department, and announced simultaneously by the US Defense Security Cooperation Agency.
Days after Imran Khan’s visit, US approves $125 million sales to support Pakistan’s F-16 jets
— B.Sethia (@sethia_b) July 27, 2019
The development comes days after the meeting between US president Donald Trump and Pakistan prime Minister Imran Khan in Oval Office at the White House. pic.twitter.com/55uLgi2ETy
The approval for technical and logistics support for Pakistan's F-16s comes just days after Prime Minister Imran Khan met with US President Donald Trump at the White House.
On one hand #USA is giving military equipment's for #India's C-17 and on the other hand it is giving #Pakistan F-16's! basically its playing the monkey between the two fighting cats! https://t.co/3zt0pSRgb0 && https://t.co/R2IwZuslDw
— Shobhan Mankad (@shobhan03) July 27, 2019
The potential sale will support US foreign policy and national security "by protecting US technology through the continued presence of US personnel that provide 24/7 end-use monitoring," the statement announcing the Pakistan approval read.
Separately, the DSCA said that India asked to buy spare parts and test equipment for their Boeing C-17 transport planes, and is seeking personnel training, among other things, "for an estimated cost of $670 million."
"India needs this follow-on support to maintain its operational readiness and ability to provide Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HA/DR) assistance in the region.
"India will have no difficulty absorbing this support into its armed forces," the statement announcing the approval read.
Both statements added that the proposed sales of equipment and support "will not alter the basic military balance in the region."


