This is TheIrrawady, an opposition media in Myanmar, do I doubt if there's no strings attached with their reporting. The report mentions sanctions as the culprit of the problem. Which I doubt, because China rarely abide to these and Myanmar is one of their allies.Apparently, this is capable of firing SD-10s.
I am not sure why they didn't choose the Jf-17B as a training platform and decided to induct something new altogether. Maybe the report below has some truth.
Technical Problems Ground Myanmar’s JF-17 Fighter Jets Bought From China
The $25-million jets arrived with structural problems but post-coup sanctions and a lack of local expertise make it impossible to fix them, ex-Air Force pilots say.www.irrawaddy.com
The only way to offset this quantitative advantage is to acquire Western combat aircraft and adopt a western standard training regime (preferably American).
There's actually a response by an American pro in PDF directed to one statement from a member . His answer couldn't be more true.
Q:
Guys say there was almost unlimited funds, how long would it take to quickly build a modern airforce of 4+/5 gen fighters from where BD is with just 3rd gen jets, no AWACs, 8 old 4th gen fighters but plenty of trainer planes of all types?
A: Never mind the hardware. Focus on the human element -- the pilot.
Send your pilots to train with the best Western air forces you can afford. Let your pilots outgrow with what you have, then they will be able to tell you what hardware you can buy. The issue is NOT the unlimited funds but what suits your needs.
The unlimited funds was the problem the Saudis had. They thought with their unlimited oil funds they could buy the best hardware -- like the F-15 -- and that would make them the best air force in the region. It did not. It is an open secret in the USAF/USN that whenever Saudi pilots fly with us, we lowered our standards so as not to offend these 'princes'. Not only that, their maintenance crew are filled with Westerners who are technically speaking -- mercenaries. Yes, under the Geneva Convention, an aircraft mechanic who is hired as a 'contractor' is technically a mercenary.
So grow your people before your hardware.
BD just like ID, seems cares more about the platform instead of other more important things, such as the human factor, logistics, how much ammunition and what type of ammunition could you buy and in what quantity x quality.
It doesn't matter if you choose F-16, Rafale, Euro2000 or even J-10, its what you do once those came in your hands. In the end, the best fighters is what you have instead what you're craving for, and in this regard MN did things right. However bad the JF-17 reported by some media with questionable integrity, if war erupts they have those ready to be used.
The MRCA seems to be very picky for a fleet of only a squadrons worth (18 airframes) and yet no winner has been chosen as of this typing. Myanmar otoh, grows larger and more sophisticated, not only the JF-17, FTC-2000 but the Su-30SM will join the air fleet soon.