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{{this article|is about the Finnish Hornet variant|information about the main product|]}} {{this article|is about the Finnish Hornet variant|information about the main product|]}}
{{Merge|F/A-18 Hornet}}

] ] stands on its tail]]


The '''F-18 Hornet''' is the ] variant of the ] ] multi-role attack and ]. It lacks certain ], target acquisition and weapon control features, limiting its capability to engage surface targets. The variant is also used by the ]. The '''F-18 Hornet''' is the ] variant of the ] ] multi-role attack and ]. It lacks certain ], target acquisition and weapon control features, limiting its capability to engage surface targets. The variant is also used by the ].

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File:659 hornet.jpg
A Finnish F-18C stands on its tail

The F-18 Hornet is the Finnish Air Force variant of the Boeing IDS F/A-18 Hornet multi-role attack and fighter aircraft. It lacks certain avionics, target acquisition and weapon control features, limiting its capability to engage surface targets. The variant is also used by the Swiss Air Force.

The decision to purchase the aircraft (64 in total, with 7 two-seat F-18D models and 57 single-seated F-18C models) was made in 1992, soon after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. The original plan was to buy about 40 western fighters and about 20 Soviet fighters due to political reasons, but the collapse of the Soviet Union removed the political reason to also buy Soviet aircraft. The plan changed to 60 single-seat + 7 dual seat fighters of the same type, and the F-18 won the contest. Due to the F-18's high price, the number of fighters to be purchased was decreased by three, to 57+7.

A key goal in the Finnish foreign policy of that era was to take no action that might be interpreted by the Soviets as a security threat; a weapons purchase of this magnitude certainly applied. Buying only NATO-compatible, American fighter jets were not possible for Finland before the U.S.S.R.'s collapse.

The primary reason for the lack of ground attack features in the aircraft is the semantic meaning of the word "attack". For example, Finland has Defence Forces, not an army — even the possibility of Finland ever attacking its neighbors is denied on all levels. This made the policy decision to purchase attack aircraft impossible in the nineties aftermath of finlandization, leading to factory reconfiguration of the F/A-18 to the F-18 variant. A similar rationale also led the Swiss Air Force to purchase 34 F-18s in 1991.

It is widely believed that the removed features can be reinstalled with comparative ease if a regional conflict or a similar need so dictates.

In 7th December 2004 the Finnish Air Force announced that it will reinstall the missing features in order to enable ground attack capability for the Hornets. Source(in Finnish only)

The F-18 Hornet is the second U.S. Navy fighter in the Finnish Air Force, following the 1939 purchase of the Brewster F2A.

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