Ukrainian Mirage 2000-5F fighters now armed with MICA missiles
Ukraine has begun operating its Mirage 2000-5F fighter jets with French-supplied MICA medium-range air-to-air missiles.
Unconfirmed images circulating on social media show a Ukrainian Mirage 2000-5F carrying a MICA missile under the fuselage, alongside short-range Magic 2 missiles on the wing pylons. This is the first publicly observed instance of Ukraine’s French-supplied fighters being equipped with beyond-visual-range air-to-air weapons.
First photo of a French Mirage 2000-5F in Ukrainian service armed with a MICA air-to-air missile. Confirms that France is supplying Ukraine with the Mirage’s most modern missile, additionally expanding its per-sortie weapons load by 50%. pic.twitter.com/HYtt9jGjpU— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) January 5, 2026
The Mirage 2000-5F is a multirole fighter operated by the Ukrainian Air Force following deliveries from France in 2025, as part of a broader effort to reinforce Ukraine’s air defense and fighter aviation capabilities.
Expanding the Mirage’s combat envelope
The MICA, developed by MBDA, is a dual-variant missile family available with either an active radar seeker (MICA EM) or an infrared seeker (MICA IR). It has a maximum range of 80 kilometers (50 miles) and a top speed of Mach 4.
While the exact variant supplied to Ukraine has not been officially disclosed, the missile represents a substantial leap in capability compared with the legacy Magic 2, particularly in engagement range, target flexibility, and resistance to countermeasures.
On the Mirage 2000-5F, MICA enables beyond-visual-range engagements against enemy aircraft, cruise missiles, and certain classes of unmanned aerial systems. This gives Ukrainian pilots a wider engagement envelope and greater tactical flexibility during air defense missions.
Until now, publicly released imagery of Ukrainian Mirage operations largely showed the aircraft configured for short-range interception tasks, relying on Magic 2 missiles and internal radar cueing.
Ukraine’s Mirage fleet operates alongside Western-supplied F-16 fighters, which already employ AIM-120 AMRAAM missiles for medium-range engagements. The addition of MICA brings the Mirage 2000-5F closer in capability to those platforms, at least in the air-to-air domain, and reduces reliance on short-range intercept profiles.
Part of a broader Franco-Ukrainian airpower effort
The MICA integration follows France’s broader commitments to strengthen Ukraine’s air and missile defense. Paris has previously pledged additional Mirage airframes and advanced surface-to-air capabilities, while also deepening long-term cooperation with Kyiv on combat aviation.
French support for the Mirage transfer included pilot training, maintenance assistance, and weapons integration, allowing Ukraine to progressively unlock the aircraft’s full combat potential rather than fielding it in a limited configuration. Originally designed as an air defense platform, the Mirage 2000-5 fighters destined for Ukraine underwent upgrades at Cazaux Air Base to expand their strike capabilities and improve survivability against Russian air defenses and jamming.
At the same time, Kyiv is signaling that it is thinking well beyond stopgap donations. France and Ukraine have signed a letter of intent that could, eventually, lead to the acquisition of up to 100 Rafale fighters. A similar framework with Sweden, covering the potential sale of more than 100 Saab JAS 39 Gripen E jets, points toward the same direction: Ukraine wants a future fighter force built around Western aircraft, with the training, weapons, and support systems that come with them. The post Ukrainian Mirage 2000-5F fighters now armed with MICA missiles appeared first on AeroTime.
Ukraine has begun operating its Mirage 2000-5F fighter jets with French-supplied MICA medium-range air-to-air missiles. Unconfirmed images circulating on social…
The post Ukrainian Mirage 2000-5F fighters now armed with MICA missiles appeared first on AeroTime.
