Fighter Aircraft Combat Statistics / Saab JAS-39 Gripen
Combat record
Saab JAS-39 Gripen — Combat Record
4.5-generation jet · Sweden · First flight 1988 · Combat-proven: strikes only
Photo: U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Victoria H. Taylor, USAF / Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)
0Confirmed air-to-air kills
0Air-to-air losses
—No air-to-air engagements
1988First flight
The story behind the numbers
The Gripen has never fired at another aircraft — Sweden’s fighter has spent its life making sure nobody tests it, guarding the Baltic approaches through every phase of Russian pressure. Its combat entries are Libyan reconnaissance sorties in 2011, flown with a precision NATO commanders publicly praised, and Hungarian and Czech QRA duty.
Its record is doctrine made visible: dispersed road-base operations, ten-minute turnarounds by conscript crews, and datalinked tactics designed for a war everyone hopes stays theoretical. With Sweden in NATO and Gripens ordered for Ukraine’s future force, the empty column may not stay empty.
No air-to-air combat to date; its combat use is limited to reconnaissance and reported air-to-ground strikes.
Campaign by campaign
| Years | Campaign | Operator | Victories | A2A losses | What happened |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Libia | Sweden | 0 | 0 | ~650 reconnaissance and airspace-monitoring missions; no weapons released. |
| 2025 | Thai–Cambodian clashes | Thailand | 0 | 0 | Reported air-to-ground strikes — recent, less-settled reporting. |
How we count. Victories are credits recognised by the operating air force, cross-checked against opposing loss records where they exist. Where wartime credits and postwar research genuinely disagree we show the range, not a single number. Friendly-fire and accident losses are not counted as air-to-air losses. Full methodology on the statistics hub.
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