American multi-role fighter aircraft procured by Argentina from Denmark representing major capability upgrade following decades of aging fighter fleet and transforming Argentine Air Force into modern force. Argentina purchased 24 F-16AM/BM Block 15 MLU (Mid-Life Upgrade) from Denmark with delivery beginning 2024-2025. The MLU variant represents comprehensive modernization of early F-16 incorporating modern avionics, radar, cockpit, and weapons capability approaching later block standards. Features APG-66(V)2 mechanically-scanned radar, modern glass cockpit with multi-function displays, improved mission computer, Link 16 datalink, night-vision compatible displays, GPS/INS navigation, helmet-mounted cueing system, and capability for modern weapons including AIM-120 AMRAAM beyond-visual-range missiles, AIM-9X Sidewinder, precision-guided bombs, and anti-ship missiles. Maximum speed Mach 2+ with combat radius exceeding 500 km. Argentine F-16s replace obsolete Mirage III/5 fighters and supplement Mirage F1 and IA-63 Pampa aircraft providing credible air defense and strike capability. The acquisition represents pragmatic solution obtaining proven fighters at affordable cost (secondhand) while providing NATO-standard capability enabling potential cooperation with regional allies. Training pipeline established with Danish and US support. Represents Argentine air power renaissance after decades of underinvestment following Falklands War. Future potential upgrades and additional aircraft procurement under consideration.

- Transforms Argentine Air Force from obsolete to 4th-generation capable
- MLU upgrade brings radar, avionics, and datalink to modern standards
- Enormous global F-16 user base ensures spare parts and training support
- Versatile multirole: air-to-air, air-to-ground, anti-ship
- 24 aircraft provide meaningful combat mass
- Block 15 is an early F-16 variant; less capable than Block 50/70
- Ex-Danish airframes have accumulated flight hours; limited remaining structural life
- Single engine limits survivability over the vast Argentine territory
- Dependency on U.S. for weapons, parts, and upgrades
- Integration of Argentine-specific weapons may be complex

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