Why waste a perfectly good (but obsolete) fighter?
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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Low Power Heads Up Display November 2, 2021 5:43 PM
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It sure looks like China is converting Cold War fighters into flying drones. Dozens of Shenyang J-16 fighter planes, spotted in satellite photos, are still present at China's military airfields, despite the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) retiring the type in 2010. China could use the planes in a conflict, either masquerading them as modern jets, or using the drones to carry out combat missions of their own. The J-16 is a copy of the Soviet Union's MiG-19, a single-seat, twin-engine fighter that made its debut in the mid-1950s. The fighter was provided to the PRC, where at least 2,000 were manufactured under license by the Shenyang Aircraft Corporation. The J-6 was China's 1st supersonic fighter jet, but had several limitations, with early versions lacking an air-to-air radar. According to Defense News, reports surfaced in China in 2013 that the PLAAF was turning the planes into drones, "for use either as a decoy to overwhelm adversary air defences by their sheer numbers, or as a rudimentary unmanned combat aircraft." The PLA’s Eastern Theater Command recently released photos showing the PLAAF’s J-6 unmanned aircraft conversion. Blurred serials suggest active service; at least 50 can be seen in @planet imagery from September at 1 of 2 bases known to be operating the type.