The Leteće zvezde (Serbian Cyrillic: Летеће звезде, English: Flying Stars) was the official aerobatic flight display team of the Yugoslav Air Force.
They were replicated in 1990 by the G-4 Super Galeb advanced jet trainer and light attack aircraft which had made its debut in the West at the 1983 Paris air show.
However, almost exactly a year after their first public appearance, at the 1990 Batajnica airshow – and just before they were to make their international debut in Italy – the Flying Stars were grounded by the outbreak of hostilities in Slovenia at 1991.
During the years of isolation and sanctions, the team's Super Galebs were used for advanced training by the Air Force, although some the retained their red, white and blue color schemes.
Once the decision to reform the Flying stars had been made on 9 October 1996, Major General Blagoje Grahovac, Commander of the Aviation Corps, gave the 172nd Air Brigade – controlling units at Podgorica – the responsibility of choosing new pilots and working out new routines.
Pilots were selected from a large number of volunteers, all of whom were experienced instructors and included two former members of the 1990 team, Major Predrag Vukašinović and Captain Saša Ristić.
After the war, team have appeared flying on standard Super Galeb aircraft of Air Force, painted in regular camouflage schemes until it was formally disbanded in 2000.