There are obvious areas where Chinese equipment are lacking when compared to western ones but whenever a country decides to go with non-Chinese subsystems or rid their inventory, many use it to make some outrageous sweeping conclusions which also triggers the Chinese chauvinists to get aggressive.
Since I'm one of those Chinese chauvinists you referred to (hell, I'm the arch-chauvinist), I'll weigh in on this. First though, I have to say that I'm pleasantly surprised this whole topic is still going strong in this thread. I gave Turkey the verbal smack 10 pages ago
https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/jf-17-fc-1-fighter-aircraft-thread.t5634/page-482#post-583157
and it's touched off a firestorm that's still going strong. That's what I love about SDF - you guys will take a topic and strip it to the bone. It also tells me that there's a real hunger for political debate (along with all the jostling it entails) around here. People here hold PDF in disdain, but for all its faults it's a much freer and more open forum than this one.
Chinese military technology is certainly behind
the West's America's - China has no naval stealth fighter, no stealth bomber, no nuclear supercarrier, the WS-15 has been in development since Noah's flood, etc. But we're not talking about America, we're talking about Turkey. What does, of all countries,
Turkey make that China doesn't?
Pakistan has made it clear wrt Greece and Libya that it is getting very close to Erdogan's Turkey.
Middle Eastern geopolitics is one of my favourite topics; it's the irl
Game of Thrones. There's a new schism forming in the Muslim world - in addition to the classic Sunni-Shiite split everyone's familiar with - with Arabs on one side and Turkey on the other. Libya is the victim country in which this conflict is playing out, with Turkey supporting the UN-recognized Government of National Accord (you can promptly forget the name, it's not going to last long anyway) and Saudi/UAE/Egypt supporting general Khalifa Haftar (you don't need to remember his name either, he's just another of those Arab rulers known by their first name, "General"). Incidentally, Chinese drones are doing quite a lot of work in that war on Haftar's behalf.
I brought all this up to put Pakistan's policies into context. I don't think Pakistan is getting close to Erdogan's Turkey; just recently there was a summit held in Malaysia that was understood to be a show of support for Turkey that Saudi Arabia pressured Pakistan to snub
I never thought I'd say this, but I think China should align closer to Saudi Arabia. MBS is trying to strangle Wahhabism and move his country toward some form of modernity, China should wish him well and help him however it can. Erdogan's neo-Ottoman ambition - perhaps even Turkey's existence as a unified state - is a threat to China. I believe the most prudent policy is for China to put its thumb on the scales in the Arabs' favour through closer economic engagement and cooperation so that they can build the necessary capacity to contain Turkey.