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发表于 2026-3-2 08:30
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hidashu 发表于 2026-3-2 08:54
没有比伊朗神棍更无耻愚蠢的猪队友了
看看Grok的回答。
The Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force (IRIAF) operates a fleet that is largely composed of aging aircraft, many acquired before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, with limited modernization due to international sanctions. Recent conflicts (including the June 2025 Israel-Iran "12-day war" and ongoing 2026 US/Israeli strikes) have further degraded capabilities through losses and infrastructure damage. No major influx of new advanced fighters (e.g., from Russia like Su-35s) has been confirmed as delivered by early March 2026, though deals and partial deliveries (e.g., Yak-130 trainers, Mi-28 helicopters) have occurred or are in progress.As of early 2026, the IRIAF's major combat aircraft (fighters, fighter-bombers, and strike platforms) include:McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II (F-4D/E/RF variants) — Multirole fighter-bomber, with reconnaissance-configured versions. Estimated 60+ in service (some sources cite ~63), though numbers have declined due to attrition and recent strikes. These are pre-1979 US-supplied aircraft, heavily maintained domestically but obsolete against modern threats.
Grumman F-14 Tomcat — Air superiority/interceptor, famous for AIM-54 Phoenix missile capability. Around 35-40 remaining (down from higher pre-conflict numbers), with some upgraded to F-14AM. Several confirmed destroyed in 2025 Israeli strikes.
Northrop F-5 Tiger II (F-5E/F) — Light fighter/attack. Approximately 35-60 in service (estimates vary; some ~44 F-5E). Pre-revolution US aircraft, with local copies/upgrades like the HESA Saeqeh (based on F-5) adding ~12 units.
Mikoyan MiG-29 (MiG-29A/UB) — Multirole fighter. Around 18-30 in service, acquired from Soviet/Russian sources post-1990s.
Sukhoi Su-24MK — Strike/bomber aircraft. About 23-30 units, used for ground attack roles.
Chengdu F-7 (Chinese license-built MiG-21 variant) — Fighter, ~17-24 units.
Dassault Mirage F1 (F1EQ variants) — Fighter, around 12 units (acquired from Iraq in the 1990s).
Indigenous/light fighters — Small numbers of reverse-engineered or locally developed types like HESA Azarakhsh (6), Saeqeh (12), and Kowsar (~4), mostly based on F-5 designs.
Overall active combat aircraft total around 200-300 (estimates vary from ~231-285 across sources like WDMMA and Global Firepower), within a broader fleet of ~400-600 aircraft (including trainers, transports, etc.). The force relies heavily on reverse-engineering, cannibalization, and domestic upgrades to keep older platforms flying.Recent developments:No confirmed deliveries of advanced Russian fighters like Su-35s as of March 2026 (deals were discussed but deliveries pending or delayed).
Some Yak-130 trainers and Mi-28 attack helicopters from Russia arrived in 2024-2026.
Focus has shifted to missiles/drones rather than manned aircraft upgrades.
Iran's air force remains qualitatively outmatched by adversaries like the US and Israel due to outdated technology, parts shortages, and recent combat losses. It emphasizes asymmetric capabilities (e.g., drones, missiles) over conventional air superiority.
35 web pages
Details on F-14 Tomcat upgrades
Israeli Air Force capabilities
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