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Re: Inflatable army migs were at the least, 18 years old by the time of NATO bombings (if you mean the mig-29, of which there was only 1 squadron to my knowledge), or if you mean the Mig-21 (more likely), 40 years old. they were ancient by then. admittedly, the 29 was a rather advanced aircraft in its day, but the 21 was ancient. there was little way the migs would amount to 1 billion, they were 40 years old. russia probably just wanted to get rid of them when they were sold to yugoslavia. also, yugoslavia was hardly known for its well-maintained, up to date army. once NATO got involved, Serbia had no chance. |
Re: Inflatable army 'billion dollars' was an exaggeration on my part (hyperbole will get you). The fact remains though, that old or not, the Yugoslavs would have very much preferred to keep those aircraft rather than see them get turned into aerial pollution. at least a few were killed in their hardened shelters. |
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Also, many more Mig21s than Mig29s were produced, so spare parts were probably easier to obtain. Maybe Yugoslavia could even produce the necessary spare parts locally. |
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But as MrFancypants and Crazywolf said, They were cheaper to fly and far more spare parts and they were more then good enough for the roles they needed them for, and Not against the entire Nato collation. Using crazywolf's analogy, if your running a construction company, and you had a fleet of work trucks and a fleet of new sedans, guess which one would make much more sense in risking losses of. |
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Re: Inflatable army While dog fighting is certainly a skill that needs to be kept up and honed the vast majority of air to air engagements are air to air with missiles, most with BVR (Beyond Visual Range). The MiG-21 was a very capable design for its day and did what it was designed to do very well. I can see why upgraded versions with modern electronics and sensors and upgraded engines would be capable of going toe to toe with most modern aircraft. There is a reason why the F-5E Tiger II (Almost identical in size, performance, and capability to the MiG-21) was used by the Aggressor squadrons for over 30 years to simulate the MiG-21 and there were many shocked pilots in F-15's, F-16's and F-14's to find a F-5 Aggressor glued to their tail during Top Gun and Red Flag trainings. MiG-21 is small, agile, and has a very small frontal profile. It is still widely used all over the world and IIRC China only discontinued their Chengdu J-7's in last year or two. Now add a powerful all weather look down shoot radar, a trained radar operator, and some very capable air to air missiles and suddenly you had a MiG-31 Foxhound which was a very capable all weather interceptor. If you can operate 100 MiG-21's for the cost of operating 15 MiG-29's then the MiG-21 looks very attractive. When saying a MiG is better than a US aircraft it entirely depends on what variant and what block number. |
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