Ukraine has suffered the loss of its first French-supplied Mirage 2000 fighter jet during a flight mission on Tuesday evening, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed. The pilot ejected safely and there were no casualties on the ground.
The incident follows the loss of four American-supplied F-16 Fighting Falcons since April, further highlighting the strain on Ukraine’s increasingly challenged air force.
“Unfortunately, we lost our combat aircraft. A French aircraft, very effective, one of our Mirage jets,” President Zelensky said in his Wednesday morning address. He clarified that the aircraft was not downed by Russian forces, but experienced an in-flight equipment failure.
According to the Ukrainian Air Force, the pilot acted decisively during the emergency, reporting the equipment malfunction before safely ejecting. “There were no civilian casualties,” the statement added.
The Mirage 2000-5 is a fourth-generation supersonic jet, part of France’s assistance package to strengthen Kyiv’s air defences against sustained Russian aerial attacks. Ukrainian pilots and technicians had been undergoing extensive training in France prior to the jets’ deployment.
The Mirage loss follows a series of setbacks involving Ukraine’s newly inducted F-16 fleet. The most recent F-16 crash occurred on May 16, reportedly due to a Russian S-400 air defence missile. Earlier crashes were linked to technical faults, hostile fire, and in one case, possible friendly fire from a Ukrainian Patriot system, according to Western and Ukrainian reports.
One F-16 pilot reportedly downed seven aerial targets before his aircraft was critically damaged while intercepting a final drone. Another crash resulted from aerial engagement, as claimed by Russian officials.
France’s Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu had earlier confirmed that the first Mirage 2000s had arrived in Ukraine in mid-2025. He hailed the aircraft’s role in enhancing Ukraine’s ability to defend its skies amid Russia’s intensifying missile and drone assaults.
The latest Mirage loss underscores Ukraine’s continued vulnerability in the air domain, despite significant Western military aid. With rising aircraft attrition and limited air defence inventory, Kyiv faces increasing pressure to reinforce its aerial capabilities and reduce combat losses.