The MiG-21: 10,000 Built, 60 Countries, Still Flying

por | Apr 11, 2026 | Historia y leyendas, Aviación militar | 0 comentarios

No supersonic fighter in history has been built in greater numbers. No jet has served in more air forces, fought in more wars, or lasted longer in frontline service. The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 — NATO codename Fishbed — first flew in 1955, entered production in 1959, and in 2026, seven decades later, still flies in the colours of several nations. It is the most extraordinary career in the history of military aviation. Over 11,000 MiG-21s were built. They served in roughly 60 countries across four continents. They fought over Vietnam, the Sinai, the Golan Heights, the India-Pakistan border, Angola, Ethiopia, Iraq, Syria, and a dozen other conflicts. The Fishbed is not just an aircraft. It is a chapter of the Cold War that refuses to end.

Quick Facts

First Flight: June 16, 1955

Production: ~11,496 total (USSR: 10,645 / India: 657 / Czechoslovakia: 194)

Chinese Copies: ~2,400 (Chengdu J-7/F-7, built 1966–2013)

Operators: ~60 countries

Top Speed: Mach 2.05

Last Major Retirement: Indian Air Force, September 2025

Still Active: Several nations (2026)

Born in the Supersonic Age

The MiG-21 was designed in the early 1950s, when the Soviet Union and the United States were racing to build the first generation of supersonic fighters. The Korean War had shown that jet combat was the future, and both sides wanted aircraft that could fly faster than sound, climb like rockets, and intercept enemy bombers before they reached their targets. The Mikoyan-Gurevich design bureau’s answer was elegant in its simplicity. The MiG-21 was small — barely 15 metres long — light, and fast. Its delta wing and single Tumansky turbojet engine gave it a top speed of Mach 2.05 and a rate of climb that could put it at 50,000 feet in minutes. It was not designed for long-range combat or heavy payloads. It was designed to get off the ground fast, sprint to the intercept, and kill the target. Everything else was secondary.
MiG-21 in flight
A MiG-21 in flight. Over 11,000 were built across four countries, making it the most-produced supersonic jet in history. Wikimedia Commons
The aircraft first flew on June 16, 1955, and entered Soviet Air Force service in 1959. Within a decade, it was everywhere.

The Cold War’s Export Fighter

What made the MiG-21 unique was not just its performance — it was its availability. The Soviet Union used the Fishbed as a tool of foreign policy, exporting it to allied nations across the developing world. Egypt, Syria, Iraq, India, Cuba, North Vietnam, Angola, Mozambique, Ethiopia, North Korea — if a country aligned with Moscow during the Cold War, it almost certainly received MiG-21s. The economics were part of the appeal. The MiG-21 was cheap to build, cheap to maintain, and simple to operate. It did not require the extensive ground infrastructure that Western fighters demanded. It could operate from short, rough runways. Its systems were robust and easy to repair with basic tools. For air forces with limited budgets and limited training pipelines, the Fishbed was often the only supersonic fighter they could realistically operate. China took the concept even further. After receiving a licence to produce the MiG-21 in the 1960s, China developed its own version — the Chengdu J-7 (export designation F-7) — and built approximately 2,400 of them between 1966 and 2013. Chinese-built Fishbed derivatives served in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Tanzania, and a dozen other countries, extending the type’s reach far beyond Moscow’s original sphere of influence.

Combat Record: Vietnam to Syria

The MiG-21’s combat record is as sprawling as its operator list. North Vietnamese pilots flying MiG-21s against American F-4 Phantoms and F-105 Thunderchiefs over the skies of Hanoi became some of the most studied engagements in the history of air combat. The Fishbed’s small size, agility, and ability to accelerate quickly made it a dangerous opponent in a turning fight — especially when flown by skilled pilots who understood its strengths. In the Middle East, Egyptian and Syrian MiG-21s fought Israeli Mirages and Phantoms across multiple wars. Indian MiG-21s clashed with Pakistani F-104 Starfighters and F-86 Sabres. In Africa, Cuban-piloted MiG-21s fought South African forces in Angola. The Fishbed saw combat on every continent except Antarctica and Australia. The results were mixed — the MiG-21 was not always the best fighter in the sky, especially against later Western types. But it was always there. Its sheer numbers and global distribution meant that for decades, any pilot flying a Western fighter anywhere in the world had to be prepared to face a Fishbed.

Seven Decades and Counting

India, the largest non-Soviet operator, finally retired its last MiG-21s in September 2025 after more than sixty years of service. The Indian Air Force’s relationship with the Fishbed was long, proud, and occasionally tragic — the type earned the grim nickname "Flying Coffin" due to a series of crashes over the decades, many attributed to ageing airframes and maintenance challenges rather than design flaws. But several nations still fly the MiG-21 or its Chinese-built derivatives in 2026. The type’s longevity is a testament to its fundamental design: simple, rugged, and adaptable enough to accept modern avionics upgrades that keep it minimally relevant even in an era of stealth fighters and beyond-visual-range missiles. At MiGFlug, we know the MiG-21 intimately — it is one of the jets we offer to civilians who want to experience supersonic flight firsthand. You can fly a MiG-21 with MiGFlug and feel the raw power of the most-produced supersonic jet in history for yourself. Ten thousand built. Sixty countries. Seven decades. No fighter jet in history has a story like the Fishbed.

Sources: Wikipedia, Military Factory, HistoryNet, National Interest, Global Military

Related Questions

What is the MiG-21?

The MiG-21 is a Soviet supersonic jet fighter, NATO codename "Fishbed," designed by the Mikoyan-Gurevich bureau. It first flew in 1955 and became the most-produced supersonic aircraft in history, with over 11,000 built. Small, light and fast, it was designed to sprint to an intercept, and it remains in limited service in 2026.

How many MiG-21s were built?

Roughly 11,496 MiG-21s were built — about 10,645 in the USSR, 657 in India and 194 in Czechoslovakia — making it the most-produced supersonic jet ever. China built around 2,400 more as the Chengdu J-7/F-7 between 1966 and 2013. No other supersonic fighter has been manufactured in greater numbers.

How fast is the MiG-21?

The MiG-21 has a top speed of about Mach 2.05, roughly twice the speed of sound. Its delta wing and single Tumansky turbojet gave it a blistering rate of climb, able to reach 50,000 feet in minutes. It was built to intercept enemy bombers quickly rather than fly long-range missions.

When did the MiG-21 first fly?

The MiG-21 first flew on June 16, 1955, and entered Soviet Air Force service in 1959. Within a decade it had spread to air forces across the developing world. Seven decades later, in 2026, several nations still operate the type — an almost unmatched career in military aviation.

How many countries have used the MiG-21?

The MiG-21 has served in roughly 60 countries across four continents. The Soviet Union used it as a tool of foreign policy, exporting it to allies including Egypt, Syria, Iraq, India, Cuba, North Vietnam and North Korea. Several of these Soviet-aligned air forces still fly Cold War-era MiGs today.

Is the MiG-21 still in service?

Yes. Although India retired its last MiG-21s in September 2025, several nations still operated the type in 2026, seven decades after its first flight. Its longevity comes from low cost, simple maintenance and rugged design. For how such jets fit into the wider history of military aviation, see our overview.

What is the NATO codename for the MiG-21?

The NATO reporting name for the MiG-21 is "Fishbed." NATO assigned codenames beginning with "F" to Soviet fighters to make them easier to identify than their numeric designations. The Fishbed became one of the most recognised shapes of the Cold War, familiar from conflicts across Asia, Africa and the Middle East.

What wars did the MiG-21 fight in?

The MiG-21 saw combat in Vietnam, the Arab-Israeli wars over the Sinai and Golan Heights, the India-Pakistan conflicts, and wars in Angola, Ethiopia, Iraq and Syria, among others. Few aircraft have fought in more conflicts. Its mix of speed and availability made it the standard fighter of Soviet-aligned nations.

What is the Chengdu J-7?

The Chengdu J-7 (export designation F-7) is a Chinese-built copy of the MiG-21. China produced roughly 2,400 of them between 1966 and 2013, long after Soviet production ended. The J-7 extended the basic MiG-21 design's service life by decades and was itself widely exported around the world.

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