Yes, and? Those aren't used exclusively for air shows like the Tutor is (and even that was originally our trainer plane before it became obsolete in that role). They're active duty aircraft seconded for demonstrations.
Which is also their combat plane, and each one can be returned to combat duty within 72 hours.
Buying a plane  just for demonstration purposes would be pointless. Whatever we get for the new trainer to replace the Hawk should also replace the Tutor.
I'm not sure I follow. If we want a light...
Gen 4 is obsolete. It's time to upgrade.
It's not cheaper. Saab's claims are nonsense. That $8,000 per hour won't even fill the tank.
If we want something cheap for low intensity, friendly skies COIN op missions, there are better options. We can add guns and bombs to trainers, like the AT-6...
They ordered it in 2014, and have had ten delivered since then, and that's with a domestic aerospace industry cooperating. Saab promised 14,000 jobs, about 200 have materialized. The costs keep rising because of the delays.
And Sweden's neighbour, Finland, now a NATO member, evaluated the Gripen and F-35 and picked the F-35, finding it was actually cheaper due to Saab massively underestimating the costs of the Gripen.
It's also operated by Britain, Australia and Turkey. Also, the exact reason for NATO picking the GlobalEye isn't public, but it probably has to do with their expected patrol areas and mission times being shorter than what we can expect, which favours the shorter range GlobalEye. They're probably...
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