AIDC F-CK-1 Ching-kuo

The AIDC F-CK-1 Ching-Kuo (Chinese: 經國號戰機; pinyin: Jīngguó Hào Zhànjī), commonly known as the Indigenous Defense Fighter (IDF), is a multirole combat aircraft named after Chiang Ching-kuo, the late President of the Republic of China. The aircraft made its first flight in 1989. It entered service with Republic of China Air Force (Taiwan) in 1992. All 130 production aircraft were manufactured by 1999.

F-CK-1 Ching-Kuo
An ROCAF F-CK-1A on approach
Role Multirole fighter
National origin Taiwan
Manufacturer Aerospace Industrial Development Corporation
First flight May 28, 1989
Introduction 1992
Status In service
Primary user Republic of China Air Force
Produced 1990–2000 (A/B models)
Number built 137 (6 Prototypes and 131 serials)
Developed into AIDC T-5

Taiwan initiated the IDF program when the United States refused to sell them F-20 Tigershark and F-16 Fighting Falcon jet fighters following diplomatic pressure from China. Taiwan therefore decided to develop an advanced indigenous jet fighter. The Aerospace Industrial Development Corporation (AIDC), based in Taichung, Taiwan, designed and built the IDF jet fighter.

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