The Soviet Union lasted a mere sixty-nine years (the Spitfire has been flying longer), but in that time produced some of the largest, fastest, toughest and most agile aircraft ever created.
Even now, over three decades after its collapse, almost all Russian and Ukrainian aircraft have their roots in the communist super state. Favouring clever robust design over high technology and refinement, the Soviet approach enabled the mass production of cheap machines. Many of these were outstanding, but some - for reasons of politics, bad luck or incompetence - were diabolical. Let's take a walk through the rusting graveyard of the 10 worst Soviet military aircraft. We include the date the plane was first built.
10: Tupolev Tu-116

With the death of Stalin, the ‘Khrushchev Thaw’ left the Soviet Union in the tricky position of wanting to engage with the wider world but with no indigenous way of getting there. Fearing that mating an airliner fuselage to the wings of a Tu-95 nuclear bomber, to make the Tu-114, would take more time than was available before a 1959 state visit to the USA, a less ambitious back up plan was made.
The Tu-116 replaced the Tu-95’s bomb bays with a passenger compartment for the head of state and his entourage – but it was impossible to access the cockpit from the passenger compartment, messages being passed by pneumatic tube.
10: Tupolev Tu-116

While no one appeared to think arriving on a diplomatic mission in something that looked exactly like a strategic bomber might be a bad idea, the nail in the coffin of the Tu-116 was actually the 737-style air stair that allowed the First Secretary of the Communist Party to emerge from the bottom of the aircraft, something he deemed beneath his standing.
Deprived of their raison d'être the two aircraft served out their miserable lives flying technicians to the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site, presumably to ensure this flying ‘Frankenstein’ was hidden from public view. The Tu-116 was a poor idea and implemented badly. It was mercifully left to wallow in obscurity.
9: Sukhoi Su-7

For the first two decades after the second world war the Soviet Union wasn’t great at building ground-attack aircraft. Ilyushin’s classic wartime ‘Shturmovik’, the Il-2 and Il-10, soldiered on for a while, but in the era of atomic weapons, the use of aircraft for battlefield close support fell out of favour within the Red Army. If Soviet troops were to need firepower, they could call upon artillery. And nuclear-tipped battlefield missiles.
With the explosion of counter-insurgency and brushfire conflicts in the mid-1960s, it was time to reassess the ground-attack aircraft. The USSR’s first purpose-designed, jet-powered ground-attacker to reach service was the Sukhoi Su-7. Unfortunately, it wasn’t great. The Soviets never took it into battle. Other nations did, and were not impressed.
9: Sukhoi Su-7

In July 1967 Egyptian pilot Tahsin Zaki was in a formation of 12 Su-7s that was to attack Israeli forces opposite the Suez Canal. Loaded with four 500kg bombs each, the jets suffered so much drag that they couldn’t accelerate beyond 600km/h. They also proved very difficult to control, lacking stability at slow speeds. Provided it made it over the battlefield unscathed, the Su-7 was hampered by a limited range.

















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