TechFrance equips Ukraine with cutting-edge Mirage 2000 jets

France equips Ukraine with cutting-edge Mirage 2000 jets

A pair of French Mirage 2000D in flight.
A pair of French Mirage 2000D in flight.
Images source: © air and space force | Johan Pipe
Przemysław Juraszek

8 October 2024 16:51

In the first quarter of 2025, Ukraine will receive, alongside more F-16 aircraft, the competitive Mirage 2000. French Defence Minister Sébastien Lecornu confirmed that they will be equipped with new air-to-air and air-to-ground weapons. We present the performance of these machines and explain what they may be equipped with.

Information about France transferring Mirage 2000 aircraft to Ukraine has been circulating since 2023, but the French Ministry of Defence has only now confirmed the deliveries. The aircraft, like the F-16A/B MLU being delivered, are expected to undergo modifications to enhance their performance against modern Russian machines.

Mirage 2000 for Ukraine. A competitor to the F-16 in the famous tender of the century

According to earlier announcements, Ukraine was expected to receive the 2000-5 version in the D variant, a strike model developed in the 1990s.

The Mirage 2000 is a tailless design with delta wings, continuing the design trend of the Dassault company. The aircraft has gained many foreign clients, such as Brazil, Egypt, Greece, India, Qatar, Peru, Taiwan, and the United Arab Emirates, where it still serves in some cases.

This is a two-seater machine capable of flying supersonically at altitudes of several metres, similar to the Panavia Tornado. This is to provide greater safety during flights in regions with active enemy air defenses. The aircraft is equipped with two DEFA 554 cannons of 30 mm calibre and nine pylons with a total payload capacity of just over 7 tonnes (15,000 lbs) of weaponry.

Additional armaments may include SCALP-EG cruise missiles, the French counterpart to the Storm Shadow, guided bombs from the GBU family competing with JDAM, AM-39 Exocet anti-ship missiles, and laser-guided anti-tank AS-30L missiles.

Modifications that the Mirage 2000-5 for Ukraine may receive

The modifications mentioned by Sébastien Lecornu may involve upgrading the offered aircraft to the latest export standard, namely Mirage 2000-9 or Mirage 2000-5 Mk.2. Besides a new electronic warfare system, this would mean the use of an RDY-2 radar or integration with new MICA air-to-air missiles with a range of up to 80 kilometres.

Furthermore, integration of the Mirage aircraft for Ukraine with AASM Hammer guided bombs, which allow strikes on targets up to 14 kilometres away during low-altitude drops, is possible thanks to a rocket booster providing additional propulsion to the glided bomb. Currently, Ukraine successfully uses these bombs on home-modified MiG-29 aircraft.

The second option is the integration of the Mirage 2000-5 with the MBDA Meteor very long-range air-to-air missile, capable of targeting at distances up to 200 kilometres. India has been seeking this for their Mirage 2000 in recent years. This idea was previously rejected by the French as too complex and uneconomical, but perhaps there has been a change of opinion now.