A Chinese commentator that the name “Hangor” references a Pakistani submarine credited with sinking India’s INS Khukri in 1971. Pakistan’s current submarine fleet mainly consists of upgraded French-built Agosta-class vessels, while earlier efforts to acquire newer European submarines did not materialise due to financial and political constraints. In effect, China is seen as the principal external supplier filling this capability gap.
Liu Zongyi, director of the Center for South Asian Studies at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies, that Pakistan’s priority is to draw on China’s experience to strengthen its industrial base and advance modernisation. Wu Peixin, a Beijing-based commentator, that these are the first submarines in South Asia fitted with an AIP system, using China’s domestically developed Stirling engine. This enables prolonged submerged operations at low speeds for several days. The capability marks a clear generational shift from conventional diesel-electric submarines and narrows the operational gap with more advanced undersea platforms.
On Chinese the delivery has been framed as a milestone in China-Pakistan defence cooperation, with wider implications for maritime security dynamics in the Indian Ocean.
At the commissioning ceremony, Pakistan’s leadership emphasised the submarines’ role in deterring potential aggression and securing sea lines of communication across the Arabian Sea and the broader Indian Ocean Region (IOR). Interestingly, Chinese discourse overwhelmingly the development through the prism of India and regional balance in the IOR.
A Baijiahao commentator the delivery in hyperbolic terms, claiming Pakistan had staged an event “enough to shake the Indian Ocean” and suggesting that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi would be “unable to sleep”. The same commentary framed the induction of the Hangor-class submarine as a qualitative leap in Pakistan’s undersea capability that would undermine India’s ambition to dominate the IOR.
Within this narrative, the S26P is presented as a platform capable of altering India’s naval posture. Some analyses that its low acoustic signature could complicate India’s anti-submarine warfare environment, including against nuclear-powered submarines. They further suggest that once all eight submarines are operational, Pakistan’s undersea fleet could reach its most capable state to date, with implications for regional naval balance.
Other assessments extend this argument further, potential risks to high-value Indian naval assets, including carrier strike groups, and pointing to perceived gaps in India’s anti-submarine warfare capacity. The submarines are also linked to Pakistan’s evolving sea-based nuclear deterrent, with suggestions that they could strengthen a credible second-strike capability.
One commentator distils the submarine cooperation framing into: enhanced strike and deterrence capability, including sea-based nuclear second-strike potential; an asymmetric naval strategy designed to offset India’s numerical advantage and raise the costs of anti-submarine warfare; India’s vulnerabilities, particularly an ageing submarine fleet and slow modernisation; and broader regional implications, including an expanded Chinese strategic footprint and a gradual shift towards a more contested undersea balance in the Indian Ocean.
At the more extreme end of online discourse, a viral Weibo post that Pakistan could one day supplant the US as a military hegemon in the Middle East. In a similar vein, the emerging equation as a mix of “China’s sword, Saudi money, and Pakistan’s guts”.
Such narratives extend beyond assessments of naval modernisation. They reflect a highly politicised and speculative discourse on China–Pakistan defence cooperation, in which strategic developments are amplified and reframed across both official and online spaces. China has been using Pakistan as a proxy in the regional balance against India, with Pakistani narratives also amplified in the aftermath of Operation Sindoor.
Beijing’s sustained defence support is part of a broader effort to expand Pakistan’s maritime power in ways that are attempts to constrain India’s position in the Indian Ocean, while feeding into a wider regional strategy that extends toward West Asia and beyond.
Sana Hashmi is a fellow at the Taiwan Asia Exchange Foundation. She tweets @sanahahsmi1. Views are personal.
(Edited by Saptak Datta)



