The company split from a partnership with U.S.-based Raytheon to compete for the deal to assemble 350 jet trainers.
The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is managing the competition.
Two expected competitors include Boeing, which teamed with Swedish aerospace maker Saab to build a new design, and Lockheed Martin, which partnered with Korean Aerospace Industries to build the T-50.
Deliveries of the T-X would begin in 2024, or possibly earlier, and continue over a decade. The new jet will replace the T-38, a supersonic trainer last delivered to the Air Force in 1972. The plane first flew in 1959 and has had numerous technology and life extension upgrades over the decades.
About the Author