Mikojan Gurevic MiG29/35 2. díl / Mikoyan Gurevic MiG29/35 part 2
Product code 9788076480346
Series Aero 77
Publisher/Brand Jiri Jakab
Author Jakub Fojtik
No. Pages 52
Version Soft cover
Language Czech
Category Aviationbooks
Subcategory Eastern Europe » Soviet Jet Aircraft
Availability Product out of stock and no longer available.
Also in this series:
| Product | Publisher/Brand | Series/scale | Price € | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Aero Special Ceskoslovenská dopravní letadla 1919-1939 / Czechoslovak transport aircraft 1919-1939 | Jiri Jakab | Aero Special 2 | € 8.21 | |
![]() | Fotokronika letouny firmy Heinkel 1.díl / Photo Chronicle of Aircraft of the Heinkel firm part 1 | Jiri Jakab | Aero Special 6 | € 8.21 | |
![]() | Hawker Hurricane v SSSR/ Aero A-29 a Letov S-328v - Letadla pro Kumbor | Jiri Jakab | Aero 37 | € 5.46 | |
![]() | Letouny Junkers v Ceskoslovenském letectvu /Junkers Aircaft in Czechoslovak Service | Jiri Jakab | Aero 45 | € 7.29 | |
![]() | MiG-21U, | Jiri Jakab | Aero 78 | € 8.21 | |
![]() | Northrop/McDonnell Douglas/Boeing F/A-18 Hornet and Super Hornet | Jiri Jakab | Aero 118 | € 10.05 | |
![]() | P-39 Airacobra Dil3 / Part 3, | Jiri Jakab | Aero 84 | € 9.13 | |
![]() | Photochronicle of Junkers aircraft Part 2 | Jiri Jakab | Aero Special 22 | € 11.88 | |
![]() | Polikarpov I-16 ve Spanielsku / Polikarpov I16 in Spain | Jiri Jakab | Aero 44 | € 7.29 | |
![]() | Sukhoi Su25 | Jiri Jakab | Aero 66 | € 8.21 |
The publication follows AERO No. 76 and focuses mainly on the use of MiG-29 aircraft abroad. Unlike the Su-27 aircraft, the MiG-29 machines were from the beginning intended for wide export. India has long been interested in aircraft, looking for a way to balance the capabilities of the Pakistani Air Force. Surprisingly, it received its first F-16 Block 15 aircraft in 1983 in exchange for support for US intelligence operations during the Soviet intervention in neighboring Afghanistan. And because Islamabad was originally to acquire the older F-5E Tiger II, the acquisition of significantly more modern F-16s necessitated adequate modernization of the Air Force on the Indian side. The first requests for the supply of aircraft were handed over by Indian diplomacy to Moscow in 1982, without knowing exactly the performance of the aircraft. It was only during the visit of USSR Minister of Defense Dimitri Ustinov to Delhi in February 1984 that the supply of forty MiG-29 and four MiG-29UBs was promised and the possibility of subsequent licensed construction of another 110 machines directly at the Indian HAL plant was discussed. Of course, there are also deliveries of MiG-29s to the Warsaw Pact countries in the late 1980s and to other countries up to the present.










