Ukrainian pilots are breaking from Soviet-era tactics and learning to fly with a Western mindset, trainers say

Business Insider

Ukrainian pilots are breaking from Soviet-era tactics and learning to fly with a Western mindset, trainers say

Jake Epstein
4 min read

  • Business Insider visited a Royal Air Force base where Ukrainian pilots receive early-stage flight training.

  • The course sharpens the pilots’ flying skills before they move on to more advanced F-16 training.

  • Among the RAF instructors’ tasks is helping the Ukrainians shift from Soviet to Western thinking.

In front of a British Royal Air Force hangar, Business Insider watched as a tight formation of Grob Tutor training aircraft flew overhead, the whir of their propellers growing louder as they passed.

The small, two-seat plane is a modest beginning for the Ukrainian pilots on track to fly one of the most sought-after fighter jets in the world: the American-made F-16.

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Dozens of Ukrainian aviators have gone through an RAF-led program in the UK, where they start on basic aircraft like the Tutor before moving on to advanced fast-jet training and eventually to the cockpit of the fourth-generation F-16 Fighting Falcon.

The progression can be intense. The Tutor training plane cruises at around 150 mph, while the F-16 is a complex supersonic combat aircraft. Ukraine has been using this fighter jet for nearly two years to defend its airspace against Russian missile and drone attacks and to conduct precision strikes on enemy positions.

Over the monthslong RAF course, the Ukrainians learn English and receive basic flight training. They are also taught to think like Western airmen, shifting from the Soviet-era mindset shaped by Sukhoi and MiG aircraft and tightly controlled missions — pervasive in Kyiv’s air force before the war — toward a style of flying that puts more decision-making in the pilot’s hands.

“We train them to operate in a Western style,” Wing Cdr. Tom, the chief flying instructor for the training program, told Business Insider last week at a graduation ceremony for the latest cohort of Ukrainian pilots. He could only be identified by his rank and first name for security reasons.

A RAF Grob Tutor flying.
Ukrainian pilots first learn to fly the Grob Tutor before progressing to fast-jet training.Royal Air Force

In 2024, Ukraine received its first F-16 Fighting Falcon, the first of dozens pledged by a coalition of NATO allies to modernize its arsenal of aging Soviet-era warplanes. The Ukrainian pilots are trained to operate the jet at locations in the US and Europe.

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So far, more than 50 Ukrainian pilots have completed the UK’s early-stage English-language and elementary flying course, designed to prepare them for more advanced fast-jet training abroad.

RAF Air Chief Marshal Harvey Smyth, Britain’s Chief of the Air Staff, told Business Insider at the graduation event last week that the Ukrainians will build on the “incredibly important” groundwork laid during this initial training “as they go through to fighter pilot training and then straight to the front line to do the good work they’re doing in defending their home nation at the moment against Russia.”

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