An F-16AM spotted over Ukrainian airspace, armed with air-to-air missiles and precision guided bombs, may be exposing itself to heightened risk when used against distant ground targets, a former military pilot writing on the Telegram channel Fighterbomber warns.

Media outlets had earlier reported the jet was carrying AIM-120 and AIM-9X air-to-air missiles alongside eight small diameter bombs GBU-39. Observers note that Ukrainian F-16s have generally been employed in an air-defence role, while other fighter types are more commonly tasked with strikes against ground targets.

The ex-pilot explained that GBU-39s are unpowered munitions: to release them for maximum stand-off range a fighter must climb to roughly 9,000–10,000 metres and accelerate to supersonic speed so the bomb can glide far from the release point. Executing that profile, he said, makes the aircraft a conspicuous target for Russian air-defence systems and the Aerospace Forces, inviting immediate counter-attack. For that reason, he added, Ukrainian pilots are often forced to deploy these bombs from very low altitudes, sacrificing range to reduce exposure.