WARSAW, Poland â Slovakiaâs Ministry of Defence is eying the purchase of four F-16 fighter jets on top of the 14 aircraft already ordered, a move meant to compensate for Bratislavaâs decision to scrap the purchase of 12 Bell AH-1Z Viper attack helos with AGM-114 Hellfire II air-to-ground missiles.
Last January, Lockheed Martin announced the first two of the 14 purchased F-16 fighters were delivered to Slovakia, with more jets expected to leave production lines until the end of this year. But even before the 2018 aircraft contract, valued at around $800 million, is completed, the Slovak Cabinet could place an additional order for a further four jets, according to Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Robert KaliÅák.
âOf the 14 fighters that we will have, three to four should be deployed 24 hours a day for the NATINADS system, which also significantly reduces the number of aircraft that can be used to fly,â he told local daily Pravda in an interview, referring to the NATO Integrated Air Defense System. âAll these arguments together resulted in us opening new negotiations regarding the upgrade of our aircraft and adding four more to the fourteen.â
Local observers say the planned purchase could be partly animated by the governmentâs reluctance to pursue a helicopter acquisition initiated by the previous Cabinet which was ousted in October 2023.
Jaroslav NaÄ, the chairman of the Demokrati (Democrats) party and Slovakiaâs former defense minister, told Defense News the government may be using the F-16 top-up to appease the United States and manufacturer Bell for scrapping the previous Viper deal.
âWe need to acquire new helicopters for the Slovak military, and the additional purchase of aircraft is not going to cover this need,â NaÄ said. âIt is also likely to cost much more than the approximately $340 million that Slovakia would spend on those helicopters,â he added. âThe actual value of the Vipers and weapons is around $1 billion, so Slovakia was offered a huge discount. But now, if the government drops this deal, we could lose the opportunity to gain a modern helicopter fleet at such a price.â
NaÄ called the new talk of F-16s âquite surprisingâ because the countryâs air force never requested additional planes during his tenure. âIn the end, politicians should buy for the military what it needs, and not what they personally want,â he said.
KaliÅák, who is part of a far-right right government critical of Ukraine aid, has criticized the Viper offer as âdisadvantageousâ to Slovakia. He has also decried the previous Cabinetâs decision to donate 13 outdated Mikoyan MiG-29 fighters to Ukraine, alongside other weapons, to support the countryâs defense against Russiaâs ongoing invasion.
âThe Slovak Defence Ministry has put the MiG-29s donated by the previous government without any existing legal analysis of such decision in the spotlight,â the Slovak ministry said in a statement last month. The result of an âinternal investigationâ was that there was no authority to dispose of the MiG-29 fleet, the statement reads.
KaliÅák said he will take issue up a notch, requesting Slovak prosecutors to launch an investigation into the 2023 transfer of MiG-29s and 2K12 Kub anti-aircraft missile systems by the previous government. The deputy prime minister claims then-Prime Minister Eduard Heger and NaÄ âweakenedâ Slovakiaâs military.
NaÄ said he stands by the decision to support the Ukrainian military with Soviet-designed fighter jets and air defense systems.
âSlovakia transferred the same type of equipment that was transferred by many other countries, for instance Poland, but you donât hear about the new Polish government blaming the previous government for supporting Ukraine,â he said.
Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, a populist leader who campaigned on a pro-Moscow platform, has led the countryâs government since last October. During his electoral campaign, one of the politicianâs main slogans was âNot a single roundâ for neighboring Ukraine, with Fico vowing he will end his nationâs military aid to Kyiv. On May 15, the prime minister was shot and gravely wounded in a politically-driven assassination attempt. Since his release from a hospital in central Slovakia in late May, Fico has gradually resumed his public activities.
Jaroslaw Adamowski is the Poland correspondent for Defense News.
Source Agencies