Thailand on Wednesday announced plans to buy four Gripen fighter jets in a $500 million deal, choosing the Swedish-made planes over American F-16s as it renews its air combat fleet.The Gripen E/F models, made by Nordic industrial giant Saab, will replace the Royal Thai Air Force’s older F-16 A/B jets bought in the 1980s.The announcement is the first phase of a 10-year plan to buy 12 fighter aircraft as Thailand updates its air power.“This is an important project to strengthen our force to protect our sovereignty,” Air Force Chief Punpakdee Pattanakul told reporters.The procurement order will go to the Thai cabinet for approval around mid-July and is expected to be finalized by the end of August.A procurement committee recommended buying the Gripen rather than the F-16 last August after a 10-month process of deliberation.The kingdom already operates 11 older Gripens and dozens of F-16s.The decision to favor the Swedish fighter over the American one is unlikely to help Thailand’s efforts to reach a tariff deal with US President Donald Trump‘s administration.Thailand is hoping to negotiate some kind of reduction or relief from Trump’s threatened 36 percent levy, announced as part of the president’s sweeping global “reciprocal” tariffs.The post Thailand Chooses Swedish Gripen Jets Over F-16s for Its Air Force appeared first on The Defense Post.