Twenty years prior to 1969 most air forces had been flying piston-engined fighters essentially no different from those of World War II.
In the following twenty years, top speeds almost quadrupled and cannons were complemented with guided missiles capable of destroying an enemy thirty miles away. To survive the carnage of the Middle East and Vietnam air wars, aircraft became ever more potent and by 1969 had become extraordinarily sophisticated killing machines.
The fighters of this time were also far more demanding and dangerous to their own pilots than today’s generation of digital fighters, and these brutish machines were unforgiving of mistakes. Here are the 10 best fighters of 1969.
10: Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-19 ‘Farmer’

Like most MiG fighters, the 19 was a rough-and-ready ‘hot-rod’. Agile, powerful and capable of gut-wrenching acceleration— it was also ill-equipped, unforgiving and brutal. Armed with three cannon and two K-13 missiles, a well flown MiG-19 remained an opponent to be respected in 1969, however its lack of a modern radar and modest top speed of Mach 1.22 put it at a distinct disadvantage.
Pakistan Air Force MiG-19 pilot Wing Commander Irfan Masum told us “We did not fear fighting any opposing aircraft. The Intel, at the time, was that we were most likely to face the Hawker Hunter in the war as that was the aircraft which was to cross over the border to do battlefield air-interdiction and airfield strikes.”
10: Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-19 ‘Farmer’

Masum continued, “We pretty much knew what tactics to employ. Firstly, force the Hunter to get into a vertical plane combat where our superior thrust-to-weight ratio would give us a distinct advantage. Secondly, allow the Hunter to exit and then catch him with the MiG-19’s excellent acceleration and let the heat-seeking Sidewinder missile do the rest.”
The type served in several air wars including Vietnam; Vietnam People’s Air Force (VPAF) received their first MiG-19 at the end of Operation Rolling Thunder in 1968. The aircraft could easily outturn the Phantom (and out accelerate it up to Mach 1.2) and VPAF MiG-19 downed seven F-4 Phantom IIs.
9: Folland/HAL Gnat

Though highly specialised as a short-range dogfighter, the tiny and viciously manoeuvrable, Gnat developed a fierce reputation in the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war— earning the nickname ‘Sabre-slayer’ for shooting down seven Pakistani Canadair Sabres. During the Battle of Boyra, the Indian Air Force (IAF) Gnats downed two PAF Canadair Sabres in minutes and badly damaged another.
Another notable dogfight over Srinagar airfield saw a lone Indian pilot hold out against six Sabres scoring hits on two of the Sabres in the process before himself being shot down. The lighter, more modern, Gnat with its higher thrust-to-weight ratio had an advantage against the Sabre in the vertical plane.
9: Folland/HAL Gnat

Created by British designer W. E. W. Petter, who was also responsible for the Lightning, this subsonic British pugilist punched well about its weight, but in a world of supersonic radar-equipped fighters it is questionable how effectively it would have performed against a well-equipped enemy.


















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