Gripen E’s active electronic warfare approach vs the F-35’s stealth-first philosophy—and why the Arctic environment shifts the balance.
Meta description: Gripen E relies on active electronic warfare; the F-35 relies on passive stealth. Here’s how EW can erode stealth advantages, and why Arctic conditions tend to favor adaptive EW-heavy aircraft.
Keywords: Gripen E, F-35, electronic warfare, stealth, Arctic interception, radar, multistatic radar, passive detection, Arexis, AESA.
The core distinction most people miss.
Gripen E and the F-35 are solving the same problem—survivability in contested airspace—but with different design philosophies:
- F-35: stealth-first (avoid detection), with electronic warfare as an enhancer.
- Gripen E: electronic warfare-first (assume detection), using jamming and deception to survive and fight.
A simple way to remember it:
- F-35: “Don’t be seen.”
- Gripen E: “If you see me, you won’t be sure what you’re seeing.”
F-35: stealth-first! (with strong sensors and EW, but less modularity)
Strengths:
- Very low radar cross-section, especially from the front.
- Designed to reduce detection range and delay engagement timelines.
- Highly capable sensor suite (passive sensing is a major advantage in many scenarios).
Operational implications:
- Excellent for high-risk penetration missions, especially early in a conflict.
- Harder to track and engage when operating “clean” (no external stores) and within its optimal geometry.
Where stealth advantages can erode:
- When weapon bays open.
- When facing modern networks that include lower-frequency sensors and cueing.
- When operational needs require external stores or other signature-affecting configurations.
Key constraint: stealth is largely “baked into” the airframe. You can update tactics and software, but you can’t easily redesign geometry.
Gripen E: EW-first! (stealth by deception and disruption)
Strengths:
- Designed around active electronic warfare—jamming, deception, and sensor manipulation.
- Arexis EW suite conceptually emphasizes wideband, digital, software-driven adaptation.
- An AESA radar can support both detection and electronic attack roles in modern concepts of operation.
Operational implications:
- Assumes it may be detected—and plans to remain survivable anyway.
- Can aim to degrade the kill chain by confusing sensors, breaking tracks, or stressing command-and-control.
- EW effectiveness can improve over time as software, libraries, and techniques evolve.
Survivability comparison. (simplified)
These are broad-strokes tendencies—not absolute rules:
- First-day penetration of dense IADS: advantage often leans F-35.
- Long campaign with evolving threats: advantage can lean EW-heavy approaches.
- Adaptive radars and modern SAM networks: EW tools become increasingly important.
- Passive detection avoidance: stealth-first approach is strong.
- Active denial & deception once detected: EW-first approach can be strong.
- Software-driven upgrades over decades: EW-heavy designs can benefit substantially.
- Deep coalition strike integration: F-35 ecosystem advantages are real.
- Sovereign, dispersed national defence: Gripen-style basing and EW control can matter.
How electronic warfare can erode stealth advantages.
Stealth does not make an aircraft “invisible.” It primarily reduces detection range and can complicate tracking. EW doesn’t need a single dramatic breakthrough; it can chip away at stealth advantages across the kill chain.
1) Lower-frequency radar + cueing.
Stealth shaping is typically most effective against certain higher-frequency fire-control radars. Lower-frequency systems may not deliver precision targeting, but they can help detect presence and provide cues—shrinking the “surprise window.”
2) Multistatic / networked sensing:
Modern networks can combine multiple sensors and viewpoints to correlate weak returns. Correlation and fusion don’t “defeat stealth” outright, but they can narrow uncertainty and improve tracking probability.
3) Passive detection. (the quiet pressure)
Some systems aim to detect emissions, reflections, or patterns without actively broadcasting like a traditional radar. This can constrain how an aircraft manages communications, navigation aids, and sensor use.
4) Deception instead of perfect detection.
EW often focuses on forcing sensors to accept a false reality:
- false targets and track splitting
- range/velocity gate manipulation concepts
- phantom formations and misleading corridors
An aircraft that is misidentified or mislocated can become vulnerable even if it remains “hard to see.”
5) Missile seekers are constrained.
Terminal guidance seekers on missiles are smaller and more limited than large ground-based radars. If you can degrade seeker performance at the endgame, you may not need perfect long-range tracking to improve survivability.
6) Stealth is relatively static; EW is adaptive.
This is the strategic asymmetry: stealth advantages are strongly tied to physical design, while EW can evolve faster through software, techniques, and updated libraries.
Bottom line: stealth can delay detection; electronic warfare aims to control what happens once detection becomes possible.
Why the Arctic tends to favour EW-heavy aircraft.
Arctic operations aren’t just “airspace”—they’re an electromagnetic environment. Several characteristics can reduce the value of pure signature management and increase the value of adaptive EW:
1) The sensor mix and long-range cueing problem.
Arctic defense often relies on wide-area sensing, wide spacing, and cueing across large distances. That increases the importance of networks, fusion, and disruption.
2) Clutter and instability can create opportunities for deception.
Snow, storms, sea ice, and shifting reflectivity can complicate tracking and classification. EW can exploit uncertainty by blending deception into already noisy conditions.
3) Ionospheric effects and polar signal weirdness.
Polar regions can introduce unusual propagation effects and navigation/signal challenges. Adaptive systems that manage emissions and techniques dynamically can benefit in these conditions.
4) Logistics and persistence.
Arctic operations punish fragile maintenance assumptions. A concept built around software-driven EW adaptation can remain relevant through upgrades, even as conditions and threats evolve.
5) Sparse coverage stresses command-and-control.
Where coverage is intermittent or thin, generating confusion, false tracks, and overload effects can force defensive overreaction and decision delays.
Bottom line: in the Arctic, endurance and adaptation often matter as much as (or more than) short-lived surprise.
What this means for Canada. (conceptually)
- Geography favours dispersed operations: long distances and limited forward basing increase the value of flexible concepts.
- Arctic interception is persistent: it’s about repeated presence, intercepts, probing, and deterrence—less about one-time penetration.
- Software and sovereignty matter: the ability to update tactics and EW techniques over decades can be a strategic advantage.
- Integration vs autonomy is a real tradeoff: coalition ecosystems offer powerful benefits, but sovereign control remains a separate strategic goal.

