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Lockheed Martin Completes Advanced F-16 Block 70 Fighter Jet Production for Bulgaria And Slovakia.
Lockheed Martin says it has completed production of all F-16 Block 70 fighters ordered by Bulgaria and Slovakia, closing the acquisition phase for both air forces. The milestone shifts focus from delivery to full NATO integration, strengthening air defense on the Alliance’s eastern flank as pressure from Russia’s war in Ukraine persists.
On December 15, 2025, as reported by Lockheed Martin, the company announced it had completed production of all F-16 Block 70 aircraft for the initial fleets of Bulgaria and Slovakia, with the jets manufactured at its Greenville, South Carolina, facility under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales framework. This milestone closes the production phase of two long-running acquisition programs aimed at replacing aging Soviet-era MiG-29s and aligning both air forces with NATO’s standards. It comes at a moment when the war in Ukraine continues to keep NATO’s eastern flank under pressure and when airspace protection over Central and South-Eastern Europe remains a critical political and military priority. By delivering complete, accepted fleets rather than small symbolic batches, the program transitions Bulgaria and Slovakia from planning to actual fielding of combat-ready aircraft capable of taking part in allied air operations.
A recently delivered F-16 Block 70, previously ferried from Greenville, S.C. for Bulgaria, highlights the expanding presence of this advanced fighter in Europe as Slovakia becomes the first European nation to operate the cutting-edge jet, enhancing its defense capabilities and support for allied missions (Picture Source: Lockheed Martin)
The F-16 Block 70 sits at the heart of this transformation. This latest iteration of the Fighting Falcon combines a mature airframe with a modern mission system built around the APG-83 active electronically scanned array radar, which shares a high degree of hardware and software commonality with the F-35’s sensor suite, providing a comparable quality of tactical picture in a four-generation platform. The aircraft also features conformal fuel tanks that increase range and time on station while freeing under-wing pylons for weapons, a fully digital cockpit designed for information fusion, and a 12,000-hour service life airframe complemented by the Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System, credited with preventing multiple fatal accidents in existing F-16 fleets. In operational terms, these systems enable Bulgaria and Slovakia to field multirole fighters capable of air policing, defensive counter-air and precision strike missions using a broad spectrum of NATO-standard air-to-air and air-to-surface munitions, while integrating into the same data and training ecosystem as other European F-16 operators.
For Bulgaria, the completion of production marks the concrete outcome of two successive contracts signed in 2019 and 2022 for a total of 16 F-16 Block 70 aircraft, acquired to replace an increasingly difficult-to-maintain MiG-29 fleet. Pandemic-related delays and supply chain constraints pushed back initial deliveries, forcing Sofia to rely on allied detachments to help cover air policing duties over Bulgarian airspace. The new fighters are intended to reverse this situation by allowing the Bulgarian Air Force to progressively take back full responsibility for quick reaction alert tasks while contributing more regularly to NATO air policing rotations over the Black Sea region. In Slovakia’s case, the path has been different but complementary: Bratislava decided in 2018 to procure 14 F-16 Block 70/72 jets as a successor to MiG-29s that were ultimately transferred to Ukraine in 2023, a decision that left the country temporarily dependent on Poland and Czechia for coverage of its skies. With the first aircraft already in country and production now complete for the initial fleet, Slovak authorities can concentrate on accelerating pilot conversion, building up local maintenance capacity and preparing to assume a more sustained role in regional air defense.
Strategically, full Block 70 fleets in Bulgaria and Slovakia strengthen NATO’s posture on two sensitive axes: the Black Sea basin and the Central European corridor linking the Baltic region to the Balkans. Bulgarian F-16s will operate alongside Greek, Romanian and Turkish assets to secure the Alliance’s south-eastern airspace, at a time when Russian activity over the Black Sea and around Ukraine’s coastal areas remains a concern. Slovakia’s aircraft, for their part, add another interoperable multirole capability to a region where Poland already flies F-16s and where Western fighter deliveries to Ukraine, including F-16s and Mirage 2000s, are progressively changing the balance of air capabilities vis-à-vis Russia. For NATO, the value lies not only in the additional number of fighters but also in their standardization: using common training pipelines, similar tactics and shared munitions simplifies the composition of multinational air packages and makes it easier to reallocate aircraft or personnel across borders in a crisis, turning smaller air forces into effective contributors rather than passive recipients of allied protection.
The industrial and political dimensions of the program are equally significant. Lockheed Martin’s Greenville facility, currently the world’s only active F-16 production line, serves as the final assembly site for these aircraft and supports more than 1,500 jobs, while the broader F-16 program relies on a global supply chain of over 530 suppliers in 12 countries, including European partners such as LOTN in Slovakia and Avionams in Bulgaria. This structure embeds both countries into a wider transatlantic industrial ecosystem that provides access to established training, sustainment and upgrade pathways shared with more than 700 F-16s already operating in Europe. At a time when several European states are looking simultaneously at fifth-generation fighters and future combat aircraft programs, the Block 70 offers a pragmatic option for allies seeking a modern, interoperable platform with predictable life-cycle support, while consolidating industrial ties with the United States and European defence suppliers.
The real test of this milestone will not be the formal completion of production, but the speed and depth with which Bulgaria and Slovakia succeed in integrating their Block 70 fleets into everyday NATO planning, training and operational practice. Training pipelines must generate enough pilots and technicians to sustain high availability rates, national air bases need to adapt infrastructure and procedures to new aircraft and mission profiles, and political leaders will have to decide how far to commit their air assets to regional missions, from routine air policing to potential crisis-response deployments along NATO’s eastern borders. If these conditions are met, the F-16 Block 70 fleets will provide both countries with more than a simple replacement for their MiG-29s: they will gain credible, networked air power, a stronger voice in Alliance deliberations on air and missile defense, and a tangible role in the evolving collective defense architecture that is reshaping European security.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.