Peru to buy 12 F-16s: Why a fighter that first flew 50 years ago still dominates the skies
Peru's Air Force is gearing up to acquire 12 F-16 Block 70 fighters. The jet triumphed in a contest against France's Rafale and Sweden's Gripen E/F. The F-16 boasts the longest production streak among 4th-gen fighters; Lockheed Martin reports over 4,600 built and 2,800 active in 29 nations. Notably, the company currently faces an order backlog exceeding 100 F-16s — a design originating in the late 1960s, per Smithsonian Air and Space magazine.The answer lies in continuous technological upgrades to the combat aircraft. This latest iteration of the fighter builds on the capabilities of the iconic jet, with integrated advanced avionics, safety systems, and extended mission endurance. At the heart of these upgrades is the Scalable Agile Beam Radar (SABR), pronounced “saber,” APG-83 AESA radar. This radar gives this variant of the F-16 capabilities comparable to its fifth-generation Lockheed Martin stablemate, the F-35; according to the manufacturer, the radars of the two aircraft share 95% software commonality and 70% hardware compatibility.

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