• The US has purchased 81 Soviet-era combat aircraft from Kazakhstan, the Kyiv Post reports.
  • Kazakhstan, a historic ally of Russia, is engaging more with Western nations.
  • The planes could be used for spare parts or deployed as decoys in conflict regions, the Post said.

The US has acquired 81 obsolete Soviet-era combat aircraft from Kazakhstan, the Kyiv Post reported.

Kazakhstan, which is upgrading its air fleet, auctioned off 117 Soviet-era fighter and bomber aircraft, including MiG-31 interceptors, MiG-27 fighter bombers, MiG-29 fighters, and Su-24 bombers from the 1970s and 1980s.

The declared sale value was one billion Kazakhstani tenge, said the Post, or $2.26 million, equalling an average value for each plane of $19,300.

The US purchased 81 of the aged, unusable warplanes, said the Ukrainian Telegram channel Insider UA, per the Post.

The motive behind the US purchase remains undisclosed, said the Post, but it raised the possibility of their use in Ukraine, where similar aircraft are in service.

  • PugJesus
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    9018 days ago

    NCD in shambles over the fact that they missed out on getting combat aircraft for the price of a cheap car.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      I’m actually pretty upset.

      I assume this was a bulk discount, but still. If they’d asked I bet there could have been a hell of a GoFundMe.

      • @HootinNHollerin
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        17 days ago

        I’d join a time share for that and could maybe turn a profit flying it at airshows (edit: scratch that)

        But Ukraine deserves it more

        • @Alteon
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          1918 days ago

          You’d go bankrupt in maintenance costs and upkeep within the first month. You’d be looking at about $9,000 per hour of flight time in maintenance and component costs, and about $7,500 in fuel costs (JP-8).

          The are going to strip these for spare parts. I guarantee it.

            • @Alteon
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              317 days ago

              That’s a hell of a lawn ornament. Lol

              • @[email protected]
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                116 days ago

                Well 20k isn’t a lot for some people lol, or could take a loan and pay it off. Like someone else said it’s basically the price of a car

        • @CptEnder
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          216 days ago

          Look, we just want it for reasons ok? What do you mean “stop measuring our front yard for a Su-27”, “You’ll be on a watch list”?

          Yeahhhhh ok Ukraine does need them more kicks rocks

          • @HootinNHollerin
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            16 days ago

            What do you mean “stop designing a cobra maneuver catch sling for the front yard”?!

      • PugJesus
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        2418 days ago

        Non-Credible Defense, a shitposting community about international military affairs. The running joke is how everyone there is desperately horny for literal jets. Like, dress the jet up in a bridal gown and go to town on the thrusters level horny.

            • PugJesus
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              1018 days ago

              ONCE YOU’RE A JET
              YOU’RE A JET ALL THE WAY

              FROM YOUR FIRST CIGARETTE
              TO YOUR LAST DYING DAY!

        • @CptEnder
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          216 days ago

          uwu notices your GBU-12 from across the room

          Lmao best fucking shitposting /c/ on Lemmy

        • @copd
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          18 days ago

          Thier admins ban you for disagreeing with them. It’s a garbage community

          • @somethingsnappy
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            518 days ago

            Either whole thing is going over my head, or you hate satire.

            • @copd
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              18 days ago

              Hate satire? Absurd proposition. Their main moderator nuke banned about 10 people on a thread I was contributing because apparently everyone was fear mongering as they disagreed when he said Russia has no operational nukes 🤷

              He had a lot of downvotes and must have got upset so he permanently banned a solid 10+ people.

              Getting emotional over downvotes is a meme at this point

                • @copd
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                  418 days ago

                  First act, ban the moderators of noncredible.

                  Mum am I doing Lemmy correctly?

          • @Aux
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            -117 days ago

            That’s what most of Lemmy is.

    • @[email protected]
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      817 days ago

      Hell, you can’t even get a Cessna 172 that’s as old as these planes for $20k. Add another zero to the end and people will start talking.

    • @betterdeadthanreddit
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      418 days ago

      Even if the thing doesn’t get airborne anymore, it’d be one hell of a way to build up a flight simulator for gaming. Probably not what’s going on here but it’s what I’d do.

      • PugJesus
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        218 days ago

        Other than demanding a trans-pride NATO catgirl sticker on the instrument panel, I’m sure they’d love that too.

    • @[email protected]
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      218 days ago

      my first reaction to the headline lmao

      the catch is that these things won’t fly, so these are useful only as spare part donors

  • @CheeseNoodle
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    6217 days ago

    I honestly wouldn’t be surprised if the reason is as simple as buying them so Russia can’t.

    • The Snark Urge
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      5917 days ago

      The missiles we’d use to shoot down these flying tubs of shit probably cost more than buying them lmao

      • @Thrashy
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        2317 days ago

        The “I’m gonna give you $100 to fuck off” school of military strategy.

        • The Snark Urge
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          1617 days ago

          Well aware, I’ve seen one of their planes in person actually. Nobody worth talking to needs convincing that crummy planes are still dangerous, I was mostly just joking about how expensive American munitions are.

        • @[email protected]
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          317 days ago

          This is one of those stories that Hollywood could use with female leads, no need to shoehorn a female cast into other plots.

    • @CptEnder
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      116 days ago

      Yeah that and they’re probably useful as hanger queens for Ukraine

  • @[email protected]
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    3917 days ago

    The article frames them as garbage, but they’re still 4th gen fighters. Same vintage as the F-16 and F-15, and the US still operates tons of those. 4th gen stuff is a whole lot cheaper to run than 5th gen, and that will probably keep 4th gen stuff flying for a long time.

    Granted, they’re probably not very well maintained, and the F-16 and F-15 have gotten upgrades over the decades and these probably didn’t. The US doesn’t have spare parts to keep them maintained (except by cannibalizing one plane to keep the other one running), and any weapon hardpoints would need to be adapted to US missiles. There probably isn’t any interesting intelligence to be gained from them anymore. So, yeah, spare parts for Ukraine seems most likely.

    • Buelldozer
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      17 days ago

      To say that the F-16 “got upgrades over the decades” is quite the understatement. A block 1/5/10/15 F-16 would get straight up destroyed by a Block 52 or 60. The airframes may be the same but every major system ON that airframe has seen continuous improvements over the years. Engines upgraded to improve power and reliability, control surface upgrades to improve handling and safety, avionics upgrades to improve flight controls, FoF performance, weapons targeting and on and on. As technology progressed we spent tens of billions keeping the F-16 current.

      I highly doubt that Russia or Kazakhstan made those same investments so while those MiGs and SUs are 4th Gen they wouldn’t fare well at all against “Modern” 4th Gen.

      Edit: That ignores the upgrades that COULD be put on an F-16 too. There’s at least some of them now flying around with Stealth Coatings and 3D vectoring engine nozzles!

      • @FordBeeblebrox
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        517 days ago

        Holy shit, thrust vector nozzle on a 16? I’ve been watching them overhead daily my entire life and the Falcon is still going strong. I’ll just look at the Wikipedia…

        ”System for Autonomous Control of Simulation (SACS) will be added in order to operate X-62A as a Skyborg”

        Oh shit.

          • @FordBeeblebrox
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            217 days ago

            Oh it looks awesome and I’m glad to see the frame still being advanced, it’s the quintessential multi role jet. Just hoping skyborg never gets any ideas about skynet

  • @HootinNHollerin
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    18 days ago

    Pepsi could’ve finally given that kid a jet and had a PR boost on the cheap, although not a Harier

  • @[email protected]
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    2418 days ago

    Probably for spare parts and then used as dummy aircraft after that, all for Ukraine. For less than 20k per plane, that’s pretty damn good. And Ukraine could certainly use the parts. Though I hope we also donate a considerable amount of our aging out planes and tanks. They’d serve Ukraine well and get second, well-deserved life overseas.

    • @[email protected]
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      017 days ago

      They’d make good targets, too. Put 'em out on a tank/artillery/bomb/gun range and punch holes.

    • Flying SquidM
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      1517 days ago

      You’re joking, but the movie industry and the military have been working hand-in-hand for a very long time, which includes giving Hollywood military equipment and vehicles to work with. Top Gun itself was given access to Navy ships, planes and other assets in exchange for making a movie that rehabilitated the Navy’s image in a post-Vietnam world.

      And it worked too.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military–entertainment_complex

    • @Maalus
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      1217 days ago

      It’s gonna be called Bottom Gun and be all about his career in shirtless beach volleyball

  • @Windhover
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    1618 days ago

    How hard would it be to turn these into drones?

    • @[email protected]
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      2918 days ago

      When the US retired the F4, a number of the planes were converted into target drones. Probably the bigger hurdle would be to get these planes airworthy again.

      • @ChicoSuave
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        1618 days ago

        The goal was to remove Soviet era planes, and thus a customer to Russia, and open up space and provide a budget for Western arms.

    • @[email protected]
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      1218 days ago

      The article calls the planes unusable, so I don’t think Ukraine has enough spare parts to fix up 81 outdated planes just to blow them up. They’ll probably strip out everything usable and use the more modern husks as decoys. That being said, I have a feeling Ukraine will scrape together enough parts to get some of the older models flying and cause some embarrassing security incidents and IFF shenanigans. Finally, there’s the possibility that other former Soviet countries can pool the resources to refurbish at least a few aircraft, which would be good timing after the latest US aid package and donated F-16s entering service in the next year.

      • Pennomi
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        1018 days ago

        Agreed, you put these suckers out on the airfield and they’ll be great decoys. Probably cost less than the missiles that hit them.

        • Flying SquidM
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          517 days ago

          They did that sort of thing in WWII all the time. Fake airplanes, inflatable tanks, all kinds of stuff. My grandfather worked for De Havilland in WWII as an aircraft inspector and the roof of the factory had fake bomb damage painted on it.

    • @breetai
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      818 days ago

      Considering they don’t fly. Pretty hard.

    • @aeronmelon
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      618 days ago

      Harder than just making regular drones, I would think.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 days ago

        Probably. Even if they were airworthy, they’re going to cost maybe a bit less than an equivalent purpose-built drone, not counting in R&D to figure out how to do it. There’s a lot of extra systems in there for the pilot, and you can make an 80s-level radar way, way, cheaper and lighter with modern tech, so all of that is wasted.

  • sylver_dragon
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    1417 days ago

    Considering that Congress just (fucking finally) handed the President a whole lot of money in “Presidential Drawdown Authority”. I suspect the conversation is going to go a whole lot like:
    US DoD: We bought all these former Soviet shit-boxes to prevent them being used by Russia and to build goodwill with Kazakhstan.
    US President: Hey, look at all these former Soviet shitboxes the DoD has sitting in inventory. We don’t need these. I’m giving them to Ukraine who can find a use for them.

    • @trolololol
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      17 days ago

      proceeds to resell to Ukraine with a mark up

      That’s what freedom is for, to charge your clients whatever you want

      • sylver_dragon
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        216 days ago

        I mean, the US could do that, but it’s kinda pointless. Ukraine would just be buying them with money that the US Government gave them in the aid package. It would mean the US Treasury moving money from the “aid going to Ukraine” column to the “US DoD budget” column. Sure, some of the aid is structured as loans. However, the President has the power to forgive half of those loans by the end of the year and the next President will have the power to forgive the rest of those loans in 2026. Unless the war suddenly ends and Ukraine suddenly finds a shit-ton of money somewhere, those loans are just going to be forgiven. As there is just no way they will ever be paid back.

  • @njm1314
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    518 days ago

    How the hell did Eric Prince not get in on his first?

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    418 days ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Given Ukraine’s continued reliance on Soviet-era weapons, the aircraft could either serve as a source of spare parts or be strategically deployed as decoys at airfields, said the Post.

    But the Central Asian country’s efforts to upgrade its military capabilities coincide with its increasing engagement with Western nations, signaling a shift away from historical ties with Moscow, per the Kyiv Post’s analysis.

    Kazakhstan and Western nations are showing increasing cooperation, with recent diplomatic engagements including a visit from UK Foreign Minister David Cameron to Astana, the capital.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited the central Asian country in March 2023, where he said that the US “strongly supports Kazakhstan’s sovereignty, its independence, its territorial integrity,” according to news agency AFP.

    One notable Russian TV commentator, Vladimir Solovyov, said that his country “must pay attention to the fact that Kazakhstan is the next problem because the same Nazi processes can start there as in Ukraine.”

    Agreements on trade, education, environment, and mineral supplies reflect the deepening ties between Kazakhstan and Western nations as they navigate geopolitical challenges posed by neighboring countries like Russia, China, Afghanistan, and Iran.


    The original article contains 446 words, the summary contains 186 words. Saved 58%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @[email protected]
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    -518 days ago

    It would be funny if this was the result of intelligence gathering that showed some deprecated soviet navigation technology was still in use, but it actually turns out to be falsified intel, so now the USA is buying planes for 2.26 Mn USD and everybody at the office watercooler in multiple nation’s intelligence headquarters are laughing it up.

    • Buelldozer
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      17 days ago

      …and everybody at the office watercooler in multiple nation’s intelligence headquarters are laughing it up.

      Jokes on the them, the United States Military will spend 2.26 Million just to setup a McDonalds. Hell we’ve got missiles that cost more than that each. It’s literal pocket change!