The Dassault Mirage 5 is a French supersonic attack aircraft/fighter-bomber designed by Dassault Aviation during the 1960s and manufactured in France and other countries. It was derived from Dassault's popular Mirage III fighter and spawned several variants of its own, including the IAI Kfir. In Pakistan's air force, the Mirage 5s are modified and are capable of nuclear weapons delivery.
The Mirage 5 grew out of a request to Dassault from the Israeli Air Force. Since the weather over the Middle East is clear and sunny most of the time, the Israelis suggested removing the air intercept radar and its avionics, normally located behind the cockpit, from the standard Mirage IIIE to reduce cost and maintenance, and replacing them with more fuel storage for attack missions. In September 1966, the Israelis placed an order for 50 of the new aircraft. Due to customer preference, some variants of the Mirage 5 were radar-equipped.
The first Mirage 5 flew on 19 May 1967. It looked much like the Mirage III, except that it had a long, slender nose that extended the aircraft's length by about half a metre. A pitot tube was distinctively moved from the tip of the nose to below the nose in the majority of Mirage 5 variants. The Mirage 5 retained the IIIE's twin DEFA guns, but added two additional pylons, for a total of seven. Maximum warload was 4,000 kg (8,800 lb). Provision for the SEPR rocket engine was deleted. Rising tensions in the Middle East led French President Charles de Gaulle to embargo the Israeli Mirage 5s on 3 June 1967. The Mirages continued to roll off the production line, though they were embargoed, and by 1968, the batch was complete and the Israelis had provided final payments. In late 1969, the Israelis, who had pilots in France testing the aircraft, requested that the aircraft be transferred to Corsica, in theory to allow them to continue flight training during the winter. The French government became suspicious when the Israelis also tried to obtain long-range fuel tanks and cancelled the move. The Israelis finally gave up trying to acquire the aircraft and accepted a refund.
Some sources claim that cooperation with France resumed outside the public's eye and Israel received 50 Mirage 5s in crates from the French Air Force, while the French took over the 50 aircraft originally intended for Israel, as Mirage 5Fs. Officially, Israel claimed to have built the aircraft after obtaining complete blueprints, naming them IAI Nesher.
Like the Mirage IIIE, the Mirage 5 was popular with export customers, with different export variants fitted with a wide range of different avionics. While the Mirage 5 had been originally oriented to the clear-weather attack role, with some avionic fits, it was refocused to the air-combat mission. As electronic systems became more compact and powerful, providing the Mirage 5 with increased capability became possible, though the rear avionics bay had been deleted; in some subvariants, the result was a "reinvented" Mirage IIIE.
Reconnaissance and two-seat versions of the Mirage 5 were sold, with the designation Mirage 5R, and Mirage 5D, respectively.
The Mirage 5 was sold to Abu Dhabi, Belgium, Colombia, Egypt, Gabon, Libya, Pakistan, Peru, Venezuela, and Zaire, with the usual list of subvariant designations and variations in kit. The Belgian aircraft were fitted with mostly US avionics, and some Egyptian aircraft were fitted with the MS2 attack avionics system from the Dassault-Dornier Alpha Jet.
In 1978 and 1980, Israel sold a total of 35 of their Neshers plus four Nesher trainer aircraft (Nesher Ts) to Argentina, where they were locally known first as Daggers and after their upgrade as Fingers. The Argentines lost two Mirage IIIEAs and twelve Daggers during the Falklands War in 1982. As a measure of solidarity, the Peruvians transferred 10 of their Mirage 5Ps to Argentina, under the name Mirage Mara, to help alleviate its losses.
South Africa purchased five Nesher trainers for trials during its own Atlas Cheetah fighter programme. All the aircraft were eventually upgraded to Cheetah D standard.
Chile incorporated some Mirage 5s under name Mirage Elkan.
In total, 582 Mirage 5s have been built, including 51 Israeli Neshers.
In 1968, the Belgian government ordered 106 Mirage 5s from Dassault. All aircraft but the first one of each variant were to be license-built by SABCA in Belgium. Component production at the SABCA Haren plant near Brussels was followed by assembly at the SABCA plant at Gosselies airfield, near Charleroi. The ATAR engines were produced by FN Moteurs at this company's Liège plant. SABCA production included three versions: Mirage 5BA for the ground-attack role, Mirage 5BR for the reconnaissance role and Mirage 5BD for training and conversion.
By the end of the 1980s, a MIRage Safety Improvement Program (MIRSIP) was agreed to by parliament, calling for 20 low-time Mirages (15 Mirage 5BAs and 5 Mirage 5BDs) to be upgraded. Initial plans included a new more powerful engine, but this idea was abandoned to limit cost. The upgrade eventually included a more modern cockpit, a new ejection seat, a laser rangefinder, and canards to improve takeoff performance and overall maneuverability. A new government canceled the MIRSIP but SABCA was allowed to carry out the update, in order to sell the aircraft on the export market. After completion, the Belgian government sold all 20 aircraft to Chile, together with 4 non-upgraded Mirage 5BRs, and one non-upgraded Mirage 5BD.
The development and subsequent installation of the new Atar 9K50 engine led to the next Mirage variant, the Mirage 50, during the 1970s. The uprated engine gave the Mirage 50 better takeoff and climb characteristics than its predecessors. The Mirage 50 also incorporated new avionics, such as a Cyrano IV radar system. However, despite these upgrades, it did not prove popular in export sales as the Mirage 5 itself was becoming obsolete.
Chile ordered a quantity of Mirage 50s, receiving both new production as well as updated Armée de l'Air Mirage 5s. The Chilean aircraft were later modernised along the lines of the IAI Kfir and were called the ENAER Pantera. The Pantera incorporates fixed canards and other aerodynamic improvements, as well as advanced avionics, an in-flight refuelling probe, a reinforced landing gear, and two additional harpoints under the fuselage. These aircraft have an extended nose to accommodate some of the new systems.
In the early 1990s, Dassault upgraded a batch of Venezuelan Mirage IIIEVs and 5s to Mirage 50 standards, in addition to some newly built aircraft.
In the 1990s, the PAF launched a Mid-life update (MLU) program, codenamed as Project ROSE (Retrofit Of Strike Element), to its Mirage III and Mirage 5 aircraft with modern avionics provided by French, Italian, and Pakistani companies. The PAF acquired blueprint drawings of the aircraft from France, redeveloping and redesigning it at the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex.
In the first phase of the project, former Royal Australian Air Force Mirage III fighters received a modernisation designated ROSE I. Mirage 5Fs were also bought in the late 1990s from the French Air Force. Twenty of them were upgraded with new cockpit equipments including multifunction displays and a head-up display, navigation/attack suites, defensive aids systems, encrypted radios, a radar altimeter and a forward-looking infrared (FLIR) sensor under the aircraft's nose, under the ROSE II program.
Additionally, 14 Mirage 5Fs were similarly upgraded but with newer systems, under a program designated ROSE III. The FLIR sensors enable the Mirage 5 ROSE fighters to specialise in the night-time attack role.
During the 1991 Gulf War, 18 Belgian Mirage 5s were deployed to Turkey alongside German Alpha Jets and Italian F-104s under a NATO-based operation to protect Turkey against potential Iraqi attacks.
The Libyan Airforce sought to improve its combat capability and looked to the weapon it viewed as the winning weapon of the Six Day War, the Dassault Mirage series. Libya - France relations were positive at this time and thus they placed a rather large order for Mirage Vs in December 1969 composed of 53 Mirage 5Ds, 32 Mirage 5DEs, 10 Mirage 5DR, 15 Mirage 5DD alongside other French Arms including Mirage IIIs. Libyan pilots were first sent to train in France in 1970 for platform specific conversion training, but as Libya did not have enough pilots to man all the fighters, a portion of the crew trained were in fact Egyptians who were being trained to fight Israel with the first two batches being half Egyptian.
The First training squadrons established as OCUs (Operation Conversion Squadrons) were the 1010th "Jerusalem" OCU Squadron at Mitiga (Tripoli) supervised by French and Pakistani Instructors, and the other was the Egyptian Operational Training Unit based at Nasser (Tobruk) Airbase overseen by Pakistani and Egyptian Instructors recently trained in France.
In 1982, Pakistan Chief of Air Staff ACM Anwar Shamim acquired an additional squadron of the Mirage 5 from France]to provide effective support to the Navy.
In February 2019, Indian Air Force jets violated Pakistani airspace and bombed an alleged terror camp in Balakot. Consequently, Pakistan launched retaliatory airstrikes (Codenamed "Operation Swift Retort") on military installations at Indian Administered Kashmir. During the airstrikes, two Dassault Mirage-5PAs from the No. 15 Squadron dropped their H-4 SOW glide bombs which were guided to their specific targets by Weapon System Officers seated in Dassault Mirage-IIIDAs via data link. The operation was viewed as a success and the aircraft returned safely.
The Indian Air Force displayed debris of what it claimed to be a PAF Mirage 5 shot down by air defense systems during Operation Sindoor press briefing on May 12, 2025. In Late June 2025, claims emerged from Indian OSINT sources showing alleged Video Evidence (uploaded to X, but then since deleted) of Pakistani Civilians aiding authorities in looking for "Indian Pilots" but discovering a type of Ejection Seat associated with Pakistani Mirage 3/5. Mirage III/Vs were employed in Operation Bunyan-un Marsoos, the Pakistani response to Operation Sindoor.
Egypt has historically used Mirage 5s, with 101 airframes according to most sources, and at least 82 continually modernized overall. They were primarily used as ground strike aircraft and were extensively modernised throughout their time with the Egyptians, and at least one was shot down by Iranian F-14As on 14 March 1986, a Mirage 5SDE. Another Mirage was damaged by an F-4 Phantom on the same day. As of 2019, there was some talk to selling old airframes to Pakistan, though this seems to have not gone through.