The MiG-21 Is Still a Great Fighter Jet

WIB air August 30, 2016

A U.S. F-16 Fighting Falcon flies in formation with a Romanian MiG-21 Lancer in 2015. U.S. Air Force photo Fish beds in service today bear...
A U.S. F-16 Fighting Falcon flies in formation with a Romanian MiG-21 Lancer in 2015. U.S. Air Force photo

Fish beds in service today bear little resemblance to their Soviet forebears

by ROBERT FARLEY

Military aircraft can have notoriously short lifespans, especially during periods of technological ferment. The most elite aircraft of World War I could become obsolete in a matter of months.

Things weren’t much different in World War II. And at the dawn of the jet age, entire fleets of aircraft became passé as technologies matured. The advanced fighters that fought in the skies over Korea became junk just a few years later.

But a few designs stand the test of the time. The B-52 Stratofortress first flew in 1952, yet remains in service today. New C-130s continue to roll off the production line, based on a design that became operational in 1954.

But those are bombers and transport aircraft; they don’t fight one another. Fighters face a special problem of longevity, because they must compete directly with newer models. Thus, very few fighters have had long lifespans, either in production or in service.

The MiG-21 “Fishbed” is an exception.

A Romanian MiG-21 takes off from Camp Turzii, Romania in 2015. U.S. Air Force photo

Origins

Initial suitability studies for the MiG-21 began in 1953. The success of the MiG-15 and MiG-17 suggested that Soviet aerospace engineers could compete with their Western counterparts, and with the MiG-19 the Soviets had their first supersonic fighter.

However, technology changed so quickly in the first two decades of jet flight that the fighters that dominated the Korean War were effectively obsolete by the mid-1950s. MiG-15s could cut apart a formation of B-29s, but couldn’t even catch modern American bombers.

The Soviets intended the MiG-21 to change that, while also providing an effective air superiority option.

The MiG-21 (eventually dubbed “Fishbed” by NATO) would exceed Mach 2.0, with an internal cannon and the capacity to carry between two and six missiles (the Fishbed actually preceded the missiles into service). Like most fighters, the MiG-21 would eventually serve in a ground attack role, in which it can carry a limited number of bombs and rockets.

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As with many of their fighters, the Soviets preferred to operate the MiG-21 from ground control, eliminating the need for bulky, sophisticated radar equipment.

Altogether, the USSR would build 10,645 Fishbeds between 1959 and 1985. India would construct another 657 under a licensing and technology transfer agreement with Moscow, while Czechoslovakia built 194 under license.

Under complicated and somewhat dubious circumstances, the People’s Republic of China acquired sufficient aircraft and technical documents to reverse engineer the MiG-21 into the Chengdu J-7/F-7. China produced around 2,400 Fishbeds between 1966 and 2013.

The combined numbers make the Fishbed by far the most produced supersonic aircraft in world history.

A Bulgarian MiG-21 Fishbed takes off from Graf Ignatievo Air Base in Bulgaria in July 2015. U.S. Air National Guard

Longevity

With the MiG-21, engineers sorted through a set of basic problems that future research could not substantially improve upon.

Modern fighters don’t fly much faster than the MiG-21, or maneuver much more capably. While they do carry more ordnance and have more sophisticated electronic equipment, many air forces can treat these as luxuries — they simply want a cheap, fast, easy-to-maintain aircraft that can patrol airspace and occasionally drop a few bombs.

The Fishbed fits the bill.

To be sure, the Fishbed would not have been a particularly useful fighter in Western service. It has short legs, cannot carry a great deal of ordnance and lacks the space for sophisticated electronic equipment. The shape of its cockpit limits pilot awareness.

However, it aptly fulfilled the Soviet need for a ground control intercept fighter that could fly and fight over the battlefields of Western Europe, as well as act in a limited interceptor role.

During the Cold War, the United States came into possession of a number of MiG-21 variants (eventually purchasing a squadron of J-7s from China). Generally speaking, American pilots spoke well of the plane, and it performed more than adequately in aggressor training situations.

Indeed, highly trained American pilots probably pushed the MiG-21 farther than most Soviet pilots could have done.

A German MiG-21MF in 1990. Rob Schleiffert photo via Flickr

Fishbeds at war

The MiG-21 never saw combat on the Central Front in a NATO-Warsaw Pact war, but it certainly has seen its share of action.

In Vietnam, pencil-thin MiG-21s found that they could take advantage of American rules of engagement by using their size and speed to cut through bomber packages before U.S. fighters could visually identify and target them. The size and maneuverability of the Fishbed also allowed them to evade early air-to-air missiles. After attacking, the MiGs would run for home.

One exception to this pattern came on Jan. 2, 1967, when a group of F-4 Phantom IIs under the command of legendary pilot Robin Olds tricked North Vietnamese commanders into a disastrous engagement.

The Phantoms shot down seven Fishbeds that day, including one flown by Nguyen Van Coc, who would survive the crash and accumulate nine kills over the rest of the war. This would mark Nguyen as the most successful Fishbed pilot of all time, although several other Vietnamese and several Syrian pilots would achieve ace distinction while flying the MiG-21.

In 1966, Israeli Intelligence Convinced an Iraqi Pilot to Defect With His MiG-21

The MiG-21 saw extensive service in wars across the Middle East. The fighter-bombers of the Israeli Defense Forces devastated Egyptian and Syrian Fishbeds in the opening strikes of the Six-Day War. Fishbeds fought Israeli fighters in the War of Attrition, the Yom Kippur War and the Lebanon War, generally suffering badly at the hands of outstanding Israeli pilots.

In one case, Israeli fighters ambushed and destroyed several MiG-21s flown by Soviet pilots.

The success of Western aircraft against the Fishbed in the Middle East, as well as in Angola, caused many to conclude that Soviet fighters were outclassed by their Western counterparts. However, pilot training issues make comparison difficult.

The MiG-21 performed more than adequately in comparable pilot training contexts. For example, Indian MiG-21s flew in the 1965 Indo-Pakistani War, and achieved kills in the 1971 War and the Kargil War. Fishbeds also acquitted themselves well in air combat in the Iran-Iraq War.

A Polish MiG-21bis in 1995. Rob Schleiffert photo via Flickr

Upgrades

The number of operational MiG-21s began declining in the late 1980s and 1990s, as more modern models replaced them in front-line service, and after the collapse of the Soviet Union led to the dramatic reduction of Russian strength. Soviet client states felt the pinch as well, and could no longer keep their aircraft in service.

However, numerous air forces continue to use the MiG-21 and its Chinese variants.

The MiG-21 currently serves in 18 air forces worldwide, including two members of NATO (Romania and Croatia). Fishbeds flew in about 40 other air forces (counting is difficult because sometimes countries ceased to exist before the MiGs that served them) since 1960.

The J/F-7 serves another 13 countries, and has been retired by four. China, Russia and Ukraine still carry out maintenance and update work on existing aircraft. The advent of 3D printing may make it even easier for current operators to keep their Fishbeds in service, as they can produce spares and upgrades in country.

Few of the Fishbeds in service today bear much resemblance to the fighter that rolled off the line in 1959.

They carry different, far more sophisticated weapons, including the R-60 AAM, the Magic 2 and the Python III. This makes them far more lethal than their older cousins. Moreover, upgrades to their electronics have improved their radar and communications equipment, and have made possible the delivery of precision-guided munitions.

A MiG-21bis cockpit at the Aviation Museum of Central Finland. MKFI photo via Wikipedia

Will the MiG-21 remain in service in 2059?

China has ended production on the J-7, meaning that we have seen the last MiG-21 variant roll off the assembly line. Croatia and Romania will dispose of their Fishbeds in the next five years.

After a spate of accidents, India is finally retiring its MiG-21s (assuming it can ever actually acquire or produce a replacement). Chinese J-7s have been relegated to local defense and training duties.

This hardly means the end of the Fishbed, however.

Many of the J-7 and F-7 models remain of fairly recent vintage, and can stay in service for quite some time. Bangladesh acquired the last dozen F-7s in 2013, and won’t need a replacement anytime soon. And plenty of air forces simply have no requirement for anything much more sophisticated or expensive than a Fishbed.

There may never be a 100-year fighter (although the B-52 bomber may quite possibly reach that number before final retirement). The MiG-21 will easily reach 60, however, and probably 70 without breaking a sweat. It remains one of the iconic fighters of the supersonic age.

This article originally appeared at The National Interest.

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