KARACHI: Pakistan handed over an improved version Tuesday of its indigenously developed main battle tank to the army.
Islamabad's joint venture with China and the Ukraine was given to the Armoured Corps Regiment of Pakistan Army at a ceremony at Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT)-a state-run defence manufacturer.
Army Chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa, top military officials attended the ceremony, according to the army's media wing.
The Al Khalid-I will replace its predecessor, the Al Khalid, jointly developed by Pakistan and China during the 1990s.
"Al Khalid-1 will be handed over to formations, which have critical and decisive role during war," a statement said.
Bajwa lauded HIT's efforts "towards attainment of self-reliance and manufacturing of world class indigenous defense products, direly needed in evolving security environment."
Reiterating the need to bolstered defence and operational preparedness, he said: "Our defence preparation and operational readiness is to ensure peace within and peace without."
But he warned, if provoked, the army "shall respond and respond with all our might," a thinly-veiled reference to long time rival India.
The two nuclear rivals have long been locked in an intense arms race, with several "successful" missile tests in recent years.
The two armies for decades have faced off across the Line of Control, a de facto border that divides the disputed Kashmir region between the two arch rivals.
Islamabad's joint venture with China and the Ukraine was given to the Armoured Corps Regiment of Pakistan Army at a ceremony at Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT)-a state-run defence manufacturer.
Army Chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa, top military officials attended the ceremony, according to the army's media wing.
The Al Khalid-I will replace its predecessor, the Al Khalid, jointly developed by Pakistan and China during the 1990s.
"Al Khalid-1 will be handed over to formations, which have critical and decisive role during war," a statement said.
Bajwa lauded HIT's efforts "towards attainment of self-reliance and manufacturing of world class indigenous defense products, direly needed in evolving security environment."
Reiterating the need to bolstered defence and operational preparedness, he said: "Our defence preparation and operational readiness is to ensure peace within and peace without."
But he warned, if provoked, the army "shall respond and respond with all our might," a thinly-veiled reference to long time rival India.
The two nuclear rivals have long been locked in an intense arms race, with several "successful" missile tests in recent years.
The two armies for decades have faced off across the Line of Control, a de facto border that divides the disputed Kashmir region between the two arch rivals.
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