Chinese engineer’s remarks revealed rare insight into China’s involvement in a live conflict between two nuclear-armed Asian rivals

MM Report
BEIJING: China had, for the first time, acknowledged that it provided on-site technical support to Pakistan during last year’s military confrontation with India, according to comments carried in state-linked media and reported regional accounts.
The disclosure, attributed to remarks by a Chinese aerospace engineer, marked a rare public reference to the nature of Beijing’s involvement in a live conflict involving two of Asia’s nuclear-armed rivals. The claim emerged after China’s state broadcaster CCTV aired an interview on Thursday with Zhang Heng, an engineer associated with the Aviation Industry Corporation of China’s Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute.
The institute is a key center in China’s defence aviation sector and is involved in the design of advanced fighter aircraft and unmanned aerial systems. In the interview, Zhang was reported to have described elements of operational and technical assistance provided during the period of heightened tensions between India and Pakistan.
According to reporting cited in regional media, including the South China Morning Post, the assistance was said to have extended beyond routine cooperation and into areas described as operational coordination. The reports further suggested that Chinese-built aircraft were actively involved during the clashes and that at least one Indian Rafale fighter jet, manufactured in France, had been shot down in the course of the engagement.
These claims have not been independently verified by neutral defence observers or confirmed through publicly available military records. The suggestion that Beijing had played any form of direct or on-the-ground technical role in an active conflict immediately raised questions in diplomatic and security circles, given China’s longstanding policy of limiting overt acknowledgement of battlefield involvement abroad.
Neither the Chinese government nor Pakistan’s military authorities have provided a detailed public account confirming the specific operational claims outlined in the interview or subsequent reporting. Officials in New Delhi have also not issued a direct response to the latest assertions, though India has previously rejected similar unverified battlefield claims circulated in regional commentary and media speculation during periods of heightened tension.


