Just a few thoughts on the MiG-29 thing (as well as the F-104 with the Luftwaffe)....
- A number of lost (Russian/Soviet) aircraft were directly attributable to the lack of flying hours...How about 25-30 hours per YEAR on the part of the pilots. The ones you see at airshows and public displays are generally the "best of the best", not your average MiG-29 driver. Availability of fuel in recent years has also affected flight hours.
- Sure, maintenance could've been better, but with conscript, under- and hastily-trained mechanics, what could you expect? What the "regulars", or "old-timers" had to work with was, well, like trying to knit a sweater with one hand tied behind your back.
- Soviet aircraft were, by and large, disposable assets - in a hot situation, push it off to the side, get another one, and go. It'll be fixed when and if time and parts become available. ...and they weren't always that available.
As for the comparison to the Luftwaffe's F-104G, well, methinks that's a case of apples and oranges.
- A newly re-created air force is moving to a platform that is a quantum leap, both in technology and tactics, and you're asking the pilots to immediately adapt. Like going from a Super Cub to a P-51. Anyone want to try that?
- Maintenance was not considered to be a problem.
- Gunther Rall noted the problems of integration on the F-104G (a bit dissimilar to the US versions) into Luftwaffe (and Marine) service in his book.
...Just my $.0135 worth (corrected for inflation).
