Israel Aerospace Industries | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Kfir (Lion Cub) |
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Photo: Robert Deering 6/13/2017 USS Intrepid Museum (CV-11) New York City, New York |
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The Israel Aircraft Industries Kfir (Hebrew: כְּפִיר, "Lion Cub") is an Israeli-built all-weather, multirole combat aircraft based on a modified French Dassault Mirage 5 airframe, with Israeli avionics and an Israeli-built version of the General Electric J79 turbojet engin.
The Kfir entered
service with the IAF in 1975, the first units being assigned
to the 101st
"First Fighter" Squadron.
Over the following years, several other squadrons were also
equipped with the new aircraft. The role of the Kfir as the
IAF's primary air superiority asset was short-lived, as the
first F-15
Eagle fighters
from the United
States were
delivered to Israel in 1976.
The Kfir's first recorded combat action took place on
November 9, 1977, during an Israeli air strike on a training
camp at Tel Azia, in Lebanon.
The only air victory claimed by a Kfir during its service
with the IAF occurred on June 27, 1979 when a Kfir C.2 shot
down a Syrian MiG-21.
By the time of the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon in
1982 (Operation
Peace for Galilee)
the IAF was able to use both its F-15s and F-16s for
air superiority roles, leaving the Kfirs to carry out
unescorted strike missions. Shortly afterwards, all IAF C.2s
began to be upgraded to the C.7 version, with enhanced
weight performance, making the Kfir more suitable to its new
fighter-bomber role. During the second half of the 1990s,
the Kfirs were withdrawn from active duty in the IAF, after
almost twenty years of continuous service. Israel Aerospace Industries announced in August 2013 it will offer pre-owned Kfir fighter jets to foreign customers, with a 40-year guarantee. Unit price is reported to be $20 million. A few Eastern European and Latin American countries have expressed interest, Israel’s Globes business daily reported.[8] By October 2013, Israel Aerospace Industries was in "very advanced negotiations" with at least two air forces interested in the Kfir Block 60. An aircraft can be delivered within one year, with two squadrons to be sold in two to three years. The Block 60 is offered with the Elta EL/M-2032 with open architecture avionics to allow a customer to install other systems. The sensor provides an all-aspect, look-down/shoot-down performance in air-to-air and air-to-ground missions, with the capability to simultaneously track up to 64 targets. The J79 has been overhauled to zero flight hours, and would need replacement after 1,600 hours. |
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