Ukrainian F-16 downs Russian Shahed drone with Vulcan cannon in new footage

Dramatic new footage of a Ukrainian F-16 gunning down a Russian Shahed-style drone speaks to the success Ukraine is having countering masses of cheap drones.

Lockheed Martin F-16 Fighting Falcon in Ukrainian service

New combat footage has emerged from Ukraine showing a Ukrainian F-16 Fighting Falcon taking out a Russian Shahed-style drone at close range with its M61A1 Vulcan rotary cannon. It was captured by a bystander on the ground.

Video of Ukraine shooting down drone with autocannon

The Russian Geran-2 (Russian-produced version of the Shahed-136) is seen exploding mid-air as one hears the unmistakable sound of the F-16’s gun firing.

According to the OSINT account, Special Kerson Cat, the Ukrainian F-16 belongs to the Ukrainian Air Force’s 107th Separate Aviation Wing.

It is unclear if the F-16 had “gone Winchester,” meaning it had used all its missiles already, or if it was using its cannon, as missiles are limited and expensive.

These close gun kills against slow-moving targets with autocannons can be dangerous for fast jets. Soon after Ukraine received its first F-16, one crashed while shooting down Russian targets.

New mobile maintenance complex for Ukraine F-16 with president
Photo: Come Back Alive

It was reported, although not confirmed, that it had ingested material from the destroyed drone.

Other F-16 combat footage from Ukraine includes a December 2025 video showing an F-16 chasing down a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile at low altitude.

Other Ukrainian methods to take down Shahed drones

There are plenty of other videos emerging online showing Ukraine destroying Russian drones, helicopters, and missiles from its fighter jets. One of Ukraine’s most effective defences against Russian drones has been the development of interceptor drones.

Ukrainian Dassault Mirage 2000
Photo: Ukraine Air Force

Ukrainian Mirage 2000 pilots spoke in November about the success they have with the aircraft using French Magic-2 missiles.

Separately, there are reports that France is about to supply Ukraine with more Mirage 2000 fighter jets. Ukraine has also sought to acquire four subsonic light Czech fighter jets, but this stalled after the affair got caught up in domestic Czech politics.

One of the most impressive individual aircraft in Ukraine is an old repurposed Antonov An-28 turboprop passenger aeroplane. It was recently filmed, displaying around 114 Shahed-style drone kill marks.

There are videos of the An-28 shooting down a Russian Shahed-style drone by door gunners using a US-made M134 Minigun rotary machine gun.

The kill marks of a European-supplied SAMP/T SAM system were also recently seen. Besides numerous drone and cruise missile kill marks, it also appeared to have kill marks of what could be Russian glide bombs and a pair of Su-34s.

Get the latest aerospace defence news here on AGN.

Growing Ukraine’s air force 

While many enthusiasts were eager to compare F-16s with Russian fighter jets, this misframes the air war in Ukraine.

Broadly speaking, ground-based air defences and fighter jets keep each other’s air forces at bay, with neither side able to penetrate each other’s protected airspace.

Ukrainian fighter jets are primarily tasked with countering drones and missiles fired into their airspace, although they do carry out strikes and sometimes take shots at Russian aircraft coming too close.

According to the OSINT blog, Oryx, over 122 fixed-wing aircraft of varying descriptions have been pledged to Ukraine, of which over 80 have been delivered.

These include 24 F-16s pledged by the Netherlands, 19 F-16s by Denmark, 14 by Norway, and 30 by Belgium. Most or all Danish, Dutch, and Norwegian F-16s are thought to have been delivered, while Belgian deliveries will not be completed until 2028.

Ukraine is planning to have a post-war fighter jet fleet of around 250 fighter jets, mostly made up of Saab Gripens and Dassault Rafales.

Featured Image: Ukraine Air Force

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