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Original price was: $148.99.$37.23Current price is: $37.23.
HISTORY ASPECTS:
The Saab J35 Draken served as a cornerstone of Sweden’s air defense network for decades, and by the late 1990s it was approaching the end of its long and distinguished operational life. Developed by Saab AB, the Draken combined supersonic interception capability with rugged short-field performance tailored to Sweden’s dispersed basing doctrine. At F 10 (Scania) Wing, one of the Swedish Air Force’s prominent southern fighter units, the aircraft was flown by 3 Squadron, known as “Johan Gul,” which carried the responsibility of safeguarding Sweden’s southern airspace and monitoring activity over the Baltic approaches. The squadron’s Drakens represented both technological innovation and the enduring reliability of Sweden’s Cold War interceptor force.
By March 1997, the Draken’s retirement was underway as newer fighters began replacing the aging aircraft. To commemorate the end of an era, 3 “Johan Gul” Squadron applied a special final flight livery celebrating the Draken’s service and the squadron’s operational heritage. The farewell markings reflected pride in decades of readiness, countless interception scrambles, and training missions that defined Swedish air defense throughout the Cold War. The final flights from F 10 marked a symbolic transition for the Swedish Air Force, as the Draken passed into history after protecting Swedish neutrality during some of the most tense periods of European military rivalry.
While Sweden remained neutral and the Draken did not engage in combat conflicts, the aircraft played a significant operational role in Cold War airspace defense and deterrence. Drakens from F 10 frequently conducted intercepts of unidentified aircraft approaching Swedish territory, shadowed reconnaissance platforms, and participated in readiness operations during regional crises. These missions, though rarely publicized, formed a critical element of Sweden’s defensive strategy, ensuring rapid response capability and demonstrating credible air defense throughout decades of geopolitical tension. The squadron’s final flight therefore represented not only the retirement of an aircraft but also the conclusion of a chapter defined by vigilance, professionalism, and quiet deterrence.
This 1:72 scale model in its final flight livery captures the emotion and historical significance of the aircraft’s farewell service, offering collectors a beautifully detailed tribute to Sweden’s iconic interceptor and a meaningful addition to any Cold War or Scandinavian aviation collection.
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