The 9 May Victory Day Parade is Vladimir Putin’s annual showpiece — the moment when Russia’s military prowess is paraded through Red Square and broadcast to the nation. Tanks. Missiles. Soldiers in step. And, traditionally, a thundering flyover of Russian Air Force fighters and bombers overhead.
This year, the flyover never happened. Officially the cause was “adverse weather.” Unofficially, fewer and fewer combat aircraft can be spared from the front in Ukraine. Either way, on the morning of 9 May 2026, Red Square was silent.
So Russian state television did something extraordinary: it inserted a flyover anyway. Computer-generated MiG-29s, Su-34s, and Tu-160s soared digitally over the parade ground, complete with smoke trails and engine sound — broadcast to millions as if they were real.
Quick Facts
Event: Russian Victory Day Parade, Red Square, Moscow
Date: 9 May 2026
Stated reason for cancellation: “Adverse weather”
What was broadcast instead: CGI flyover of MiG-29s, Su-34s, Tu-160s
Aired by: Channel One Russia (state TV)
Caught by: Western OSINT analysts, screenshot comparisons
Last real Victory Day flyover: 2024 (2025 also partially CGI)
A Parade Without Wings
The cancellation of the actual flyover did not surprise military analysts. The Russian Aerospace Forces have been bled white over three and a half years of high-tempo combat — Su-34 Fullback strike fighters, MiG-31s, Su-25 attack aircraft, and helicopters have all been lost in significant numbers. Pulling fifty combat aircraft out of the line just to fly over Moscow for a politician is a luxury Russia can no longer afford.
The official “weather” line was the obvious face-saver. Moscow on 9 May was overcast but flyable. Smaller civilian airshows in the region operated normally.
Caught in the Render
The CGI did not fool the internet. Within minutes of the broadcast, Western OSINT accounts on X (Twitter) were posting frame-by-frame breakdowns: aircraft with shadowless underbellies, smoke trails that didn’t disperse, unnaturally crisp banking turns. Some of the digital aircraft were animated from textbook reference photos available online for years.
The CGI quality was poor enough that one analyst quipped that Russian state TV was now operating below the visual-effects budget of a low-tier Hollywood disaster movie. Another pointed out the same MiG-29 model appearing twice in different parts of the same digital formation.
Why It Matters
The substitution itself is the story. Russia’s information apparatus has lied for decades about almost everything — but rarely about something this visible, this physically verifiable, and this central to the national myth. The Victory Day flyover is supposed to be the visible proof that Russia is still a great power.
This year, the proof was rendered in a CGI suite.
Sources: The Aviationist, OSINT analysis on X, Reuters.




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