These Are The Proposed Paint Schemes For The Navy’s New Adversary Super Hornets
Many of the paint jobs replicate those worn by Chinese, Russian, North Korean, and Iranian fighter aircraft.
Many of the paint jobs replicate those worn by Chinese, Russian, North Korean, and Iranian fighter aircraft.
The Navy’s “Fighting Omars” aggressor squadron will receive its Super Hornets in 2021. Here’s how they plan to use them.
How the top-secret unit came to be is so outlandish that it sounds like fiction, but as this first-hand account details, it was anything but.
The firm actually has three upgraded F-16AM/BMs for sale, which could represent an attractive opportunity for a limited set of potential buyers. The aircraft are from Jordanian stocks. Jordan acquired them second-hand from the Netherlands and Belgium beginning in the late 2000s and are now phasing some of them out.
Dozens of Mirage F-1s will soon be roaring through the skies over the United States.
A new report says the jets and their pilots are too busy with missions that don’t require their unique capabilities to prepare for conflicts that do.
The upgrade will offer greater situational awareness, ease of integration for future upgrades, synthetic vision, and night vision compatibility.
This is a very exciting time for the contractor adversary support market and Draken is now on its way to fielding its most capable aggressor yet.
The service says it will start awarding contracts in 2019 as part of a massive program that could be worth billions over the next decade.
Many private companies are buying up new fighters jets in to meet demands for more advanced aggressors to duel against.