These walk-around photos were taken at Flygvapenmuseum at Malmen outside Linköping in 2019 and 2022, where the aircraft is displayed on a raised platform in the museum's main hall. They show a Saab JAS 39B Gripen, individual number 39813 — the two-seat operational training version of Sweden's current frontline multirole fighter, and one of only 14 JAS 39Bs delivered to the Swedish Air Force.
The Gripen was developed from the early 1980s to replace the various versions of the Viggen and remaining Drakens in a single multirole platform capable of fighter, attack and reconnaissance missions — hence the JAS designation. It first flew in December 1988 and entered service in 1996, featuring a delta-canard configuration, fly-by-wire controls and a relaxed stability design that gives it exceptional agility. The JAS 39B differs from the single-seat A variant in having a second tandem cockpit, a fuselage lengthened by 66 cm, and no internal cannon. Both cockpits share the same avionics, making it fully combat capable as well as a conversion trainer. Individual 39813 is displayed at Flygvapenmuseum as a representative of the aircraft type that continues to serve as Sweden's primary combat aircraft.