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Ilyushin Il-76
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Ilyushin Il-76

Soviet-designed Russian heavy transport aircraft; used to airlift radar and EW components into Iran.

Last refreshed: 27 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

How are Russian cargo planes doing more for Iran's war than Putin's speeches?

Timeline for Ilyushin Il-76

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Common Questions
What is the Ilyushin Il-76 and what is it carrying to Iran?
The Il-76 is a Russian heavy transport aircraft flying radar systems, electronic-warfare components, and aviation parts into Mehrabad and Bandar Abbas at high tempo, per RFE/RL.Source: RFE/RL
Is Russia supplying weapons to Iran in 2026?
Russia is sending military-grade equipment including radar and electronic-warfare components via Ilyushin Il-76 transports. The Pentagon described this as keeping Iran's military operational after Israeli February strikes.Source: RFE/RL / Pentagon
Where are Russian military flights landing in Iran?
Russian Il-76 transports have been flying into Mehrabad Airport in Tehran and Bandar Abbas, Iran's main naval base on the Strait of Hormuz, per RFE/RL reporting.Source: RFE/RL

Background

The Ilyushin Il-76 is a Soviet-designed heavy strategic transport aircraft, first flown in 1971 and the backbone of Russian military airlift capability. Produced by Ilyushin Aviation Complex in Ulyanovsk, the Il-76TD and Il-76MD variants have a payload capacity of 40-50 tonnes and a range exceeding 6,700 km fully loaded. Russia operates several hundred airframes across military and civilian fleets, making it the primary platform for rapid heavy-cargo delivery to partner states.

In the Iran conflict, RFE/RL reported that Russian Il-76 transports were flying radar systems, electronic-warfare components, and aviation parts into Mehrabad and Bandar Abbas at high tempo from late April 2026. The Pentagon assessed the China-Russia "two-way street" as the mechanism keeping Iran's military machine operational after the February Israeli strikes. Mehrabad serves as Tehran's primary domestic airport and military hub; Bandar Abbas is Iran's main naval base and port on the Strait of Hormuz. The combination of destinations confirmed delivery across both strategic domains.

The Il-76 flights represent the operational expression of a Russia-Iran relationship that shifted from rhetorical solidarity to active material support without the formal diplomatic paper that would normally mark such a change. GRU Director Igor Kostyukov — the Russian officer responsible for supplying foreign partners with this class of kit — was present at the Kremlin meeting between Araghchi and Putin on 27 April, confirming the operational connection at the highest level.