Poland will deliver a first batch of four MiG-29 fighter-bombers to Ukraine, Polish President Andrzej Duda announced Thursday, the first such delivery by a NATO member.
“In the coming days, we will first transfer (…) four fully operational aircraft to Ukraine,” Duda told reporters.
During his press conference, the Polish president added that “other aircraft are currently undergoing maintenance and will probably be transferred at a later stage”.
“We can therefore say that we are about to send these MiGs to Ukraine,” he said, adding that Poland has some 15 MiGs, inherited in the 1990s from the armed forces of the German Democratic Republic, GDR.
“These MiGs are still in service in the Polish air force. These are the last years of operation of these aircraft which are still, for the most part, operational,” President Duda said.
He added that the MiG-29s are “aircraft that Ukrainian pilots can use today without additional training”.
On Thursday morning, Polish Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak said Poland wanted to transfer MiG-29s to Ukraine “as part of a broader coalition of states”.
The MiGs transferred to Ukraine will be replaced by South Korean FA-50s and US F-35s.
The Polish decision “does not change” the US refusal to do the same, White House spokesman John Kirby said afterwards.
Kyiv has repeatedly asked its Western allies to send it modern fighter-bombers, hoping to get American F-16s.
Reacting to Warsaw’s announcement, Ukrainian Air Force spokesman Yuriy Ignat said: “MiGs will not solve the problems, we need F-16s. But the MiGs will help to strengthen our capabilities.