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What happens to air power when the network collapses, runways are cratered, and centralized logistics stop flowing? This analysis examines the fundamental design philosophy behind the Saab JAS 39 Gripen and the F-35 Lightning II, not as a simple aircraft comparison, but as two completely different war-fighting systems. The F-35 was built for coalition warfare, sensor fusion, and network dominance, operating from heavily defended main air bases with full infrastructure and uninterrupted connectivity. Under those conditions, it is one of the most capable combat aircraft ever produced. The Gripen was built for a different reality. Developed during the Cold War under Sweden’s BAS 90 dispersed operations doctrine, it was designed to launch from short highway strips, refuel and rearm in minutes, relocate constantly, and continue flying even when major air bases are destroyed. That difference becomes critical in a high-intensity conflict defined by precision missile strikes, cyber warfare, anti-satellite operations, and supply-chain disruption. For Canada and the future of NORAD, this is not just a fighter competition — it is a question of sovereignty, operational continuity, Arctic defense, and long-term wartime sustainability. This video explores: Network-centric warfare vs dispersed combat operations Air base vulnerability in modern missile warfare Sortie generation and long-duration conflict endurance Operating cost and sustainment in high-intensity war Software control, weapons integration, and national autonomy Why mobility can be harder to defeat than stealth Because the real debate is no longer about which jet is more advanced — it is about which system keeps fighting when the system breaks. Subscribe to MechVault for deep, fact-based analysis of the military technologies, strategic decisions, and geopolitical realities shaping Canada, the United States, and the future balance of air power.