The JAS 39 Gripen, Sweden’s domestically developed multi-role fighter, has become a frequent subject of discussion among NATO air forces and defence planners in recent years. While the aircraft has long been recognised for its operational flexibility and cost-effectiveness within Nordic and select partner air arms, its profile inside the broader alliance has risen notably since Sweden’s accession to NATO in March 2024. Military officials and analysts cite the Gripen’s design features—particularly its ability to operate from short, austere runways, rapid turnaround times and integrated electronic-warfare capabilities—as aligning closely with the alliance’s evolving requirements for air operations in contested environments.

NATO’s renewed focus on dispersed operations stems from lessons drawn from simulations, exercises and observations of recent conflicts. In scenarios involving near-peer adversaries equipped with long-range precision munitions and layered air-defence systems, traditional reliance on a small number of large, well-established air bases carries increasing risk. Planners have therefore prioritised concepts that distribute assets across multiple smaller locations, including highways, dispersed airfields and even temporary strips. The Gripen’s short take-off and landing performance—demonstrated routinely on Swedish roads during exercises—offers a practical example of how a modern fighter can function effectively in such conditions without extensive infrastructure support.
Operational economics further explain the aircraft’s appeal. The Gripen family, particularly the current E/F variants, is engineered for low maintenance demands and high availability rates. Saab, the manufacturer, reports that the aircraft requires significantly fewer maintenance hours per flight hour than many Western contemporaries, a metric that translates into lower lifecycle costs and greater sortie generation over sustained periods. For alliance members facing budgetary constraints while seeking to meet NATO capability targets, these characteristics make the Gripen an attractive option when force planners evaluate fleet modernisation or augmentation pathways.
Electronic-warfare and sensor fusion represent additional strengths frequently highlighted in NATO assessments. The Gripen E/F integrates a comprehensive suite of self-protection systems, including active electronically scanned array radar, infrared search-and-track sensors and advanced jamming pods. These capabilities allow the aircraft to detect, classify and counter threats while maintaining situational awareness in dense electromagnetic environments. NATO exercises involving Gripen units—both before and after Sweden’s accession—have demonstrated the platform’s capacity to contribute effectively to coalition packages, providing suppression-of-enemy-air-defences support and sharing high-fidelity sensor data through secure data links.
Sweden’s decision to join NATO has accelerated practical integration. Swedish Gripens have participated in multiple alliance exercises across the Baltic region and the High North, operating alongside F-35s, Typhoons, F-16s and Rafales. These engagements have tested interoperability in real time, with particular attention to data-link compatibility, mission planning and command-and-control procedures. Feedback from NATO air commanders has generally been positive, noting that the Gripen brings complementary strengths—particularly in agile, low-footprint operations—that enhance overall alliance flexibility rather than duplicate existing capabilities.
The discussion is not without nuance. Some NATO members with large investments in fifth-generation platforms, particularly the F-35, have expressed concern that emphasis on fourth-generation-plus fighters could divert attention from the network-centric advantages offered by stealth and sensor fusion at scale. Others argue that the alliance requires a layered approach: high-end platforms for penetrating contested airspace paired with more affordable, resilient systems for holding ground, conducting defensive counter-air missions and sustaining presence in secondary theatres. In this view the Gripen serves as a credible complement rather than a competitor.

Industrial and political dimensions also shape the conversation. Sweden has pursued an export-oriented defence industry for decades, positioning the Gripen as a viable alternative for nations seeking advanced capability without the procurement and sustainment costs associated with larger Western programmes. Several NATO members—most notably the Czech Republic, Hungary and, more recently, potential future operators—already fly earlier Gripen variants and have signalled interest in upgrading or expanding fleets. The prospect of deeper intra-alliance cooperation on maintenance, training and upgrades has added momentum to the debate.
Geographic factors further elevate the Gripen’s relevance. Sweden’s extensive experience operating in sub-Arctic and forested environments, combined with Canada’s Arctic sovereignty responsibilities and the United Kingdom’s renewed focus on North Atlantic security, has fostered trilateral dialogue on airpower requirements in the High North. Joint planning in these regions increasingly considers dispersed basing, rapid relocation and the ability to generate combat power from austere locations—precisely the operational envelope in which the Gripen is designed to excel.
NATO’s own capability assessments reflect the growing interest. Recent defence-planning processes have placed greater weight on resilience, deployability and affordability alongside raw performance metrics. The alliance’s Air Command has conducted studies examining how mixed fleets—combining fifth-generation stealth fighters with advanced fourth-generation platforms—can achieve synergistic effects in contested airspace. The Gripen’s track record in exercises, its low logistical footprint and its ability to integrate with NATO-standard data links position it favourably within those analyses.
Looking ahead, the sustained attention on the Gripen is likely to influence several streams of alliance decision-making. Procurement choices in smaller and medium-sized NATO members may increasingly weigh the aircraft’s operational and economic advantages against competing offers. Industrial cooperation initiatives—ranging from joint maintenance hubs to collaborative research on future upgrades—could expand as Sweden seeks to leverage its NATO membership for broader market access. At the strategic level, the Gripen’s prominence serves as a reminder that air superiority in the coming decades may depend less on any single platform and more on the ability to generate combat power from distributed, resilient networks.

The conversation inside NATO headquarters and allied air staffs is therefore less about replacing existing fleets than about building redundancy and adaptability. In an era when adversaries seek to deny access through layered defences and long-range strikes, platforms that can disperse, survive and regenerate quickly hold strategic value. Sweden’s Gripen, originally conceived during the Cold War to counter numerically superior Warsaw Pact forces from austere bases, appears well suited to the alliance’s current strategic outlook.
Whether the aircraft will see significantly expanded adoption across NATO remains an open question, dependent on national budgets, political priorities and industrial negotiations. Yet its continued presence in planning documents, exercise debriefs and capability reviews suggests that the Gripen has moved beyond a niche Nordic asset to become a serious reference point in the alliance’s search for tomorrow’s airpower posture.