Too many conclusions here based on swiss cheese logic IMHO.
What we "know" (from SAAB's press release) is this:
- A Gripen Demo aircraft "supercruised above Mach 1.2 at an altitude of 28000 ft.
- To draw above conclusions from only that is a little thin to say the least.
What we need to know:
- Load out
- Throttle settings(Allthough one could assume 100% full throttle it's not certain)
- Other things that one might add to the picture (Some mentioned above).
- The Demo is a two seater with a weight ~600-700 lbs above single seater version, maybe one should add test equipment weight also?
- Two seaters have more drag than single seaters.
- I also wonder what impact an altitude ~12000 ft higher would have had.
(I thought such "this vs that" aircraft comparisons was not so popular here...rightly so in my view because they invite to meaningless discussions?)
My understanding is that it's more economical(in fuel consumption) to use afterburner to get above Mach 1(in supercruise)?
Finally, since already Gripen C is claimed to have the capability(on a cold winter day etc.) but that it wasn't touted by SAAB(officially), probably because the internal fuel capacity(and thrust) was to low.
It's reasonable to assume that SAAB know thinks it's operationally viable in the Gripen NG(since they advertice about it) with a fuel fraction of ~32% and a new more powerfull engine.
If they (or LM) is right is another matter.
Regards
Strange Stuff?
Is this kind of information accessible for the new American Aircrafts?
So, either you believe the press release at
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2169578/posts or you don't. The swedish military seems to believe it

I've noticed a lot of 'back talk' about Gripen. Sadly enough some of the worst from our closest neighbors? Don't really know why there, I hope it just is some few. To have an aircraft industry is nowadays extremly expensive and that we in Sweden with only nine million people have succeeded is worthsome praise in itself. Then I've seen some really bad comments about Sweden's presumed (un)willingness to fight. Well, we've succeeded in keeping our peace for two hundred years now, not that bad

It's easy to start a fight, harder to keep the peace.
Before that though, I do believe we were 'well known' in Europe as well as Eastern Europe, But you are correct in that we Swedes often seem a little boring

levelheaded but boring. Strangely enough, as we don't often go for that American art of 'boasting', we still seem to survive without it? But if you believe that it was only Danes that were Vikings you’re sadly misinformed. Didn’t you know that one of our Swedish subs sunk a US hangar ship in one of your recent war games? And that the US chartered it one year more, just to train against it

Our subs, as our planes may be small but one shouldn't mistake that for slight capabilities.
Here are some facts about the first generations of Gripen.
-------Quotes-----------------------
1. The PS-05/A can operate in passive mode, as a sensitive receiver with high directional accuracy (due to its large antenna). Two PS-05/As can exchange information by datalink and locate the target by triangulation.
2. The datalink results in better tracking. Usually, three plots need to track a target in track-while-scan mode. The datalink allows the radars to share plots, not just tracks, so even if none of the aircraft in a formation gets enough plots on its own to track the target, they may do so collectively.
3. Each radar plot includes Doppler velocity, which provides the individual aircraft with range-rate data. However, this data on its own does not yield the velocity of the target. Using the TIDLS, two fighters can take simultaneous range-rate readings and thereby determine the targets track instantly, reducing the need for radar transmission.
4. In ECM applications, one fighter can search, while the wingman simultaneously focuses jamming on the same target, using the radar. This makes it very difficult for the target to intercept or jam the radar that is tracking him. Another anti-jamming technique is for all four radars to illuminate the same target simultaneously at different frequencies.
The Swedish AF is the pioneer of fighter-to-fighter data-link, and the JAS-39 is the first fighter with the NG fighter-to-fighter data-link. However, almost every NG fighter in the world (F/A-22, F/A-18E/F, F-35, EF-2000, Rafale, Su-30MKK/MKI, Su-27SM, Su-35/37, MIG-31) has equipped or will equip soon the same class of NG fighter-to-fighter data-link since then. The Gripen was the first fighter with this kind of revolutional innovation, but it is not unique now.
Will the NG fighter-to-fighter data-link help the fighters like JAS-39 catch the stealthy target at longer distance??? I think the answer is Yes, since even the stealthy fighter can’t make its RCS in every direction as small as its frontal RCS. If you combine the data from the different fighters, AWACS, ground-based air-defense radar and so on in different location with the help of NG data-link, you may catch out the stealthy target earlier then just use the radar of your fighter’s own, as an old saying goes: The unite is the force
And a few words from the Hungarians, how they experienced the exercise Spring Flag in Italy 2007.
"The Gripens flew as part of the hostile ‘Red Force’, largely conducting beyond visual range air battles with the ‘Blue Force’. Colonel Kilian recalls, We flew 24 sorties over the two-week exercise, and we launched every day with our two planned Gripen Ds. We were the only participants to have a 100% operational record with the scheduled aircraft.
In Hungary we just don’t have large numbers of aircraft to train with, but in Spring Flag we faced COMAO (combined air operations) packages of 20, 25 or 30 aircraft. The training value for us was to work with that many aircraft on our radar – and even with our limited experience we could see that the Gripen radar is fantastic. We would see the others at long ranges, we could discriminate all the individual aircraft even in tight formations and using extended modes. The jamming had almost no effect on us – and that surprised a lot of people.
Other aircraft couldn’t see us – not on radar, not visually – and we had no jammers of our own with us. We got one Fox 2 kill on a F-16 who turned in between our two jets but never saw the second guy and it was a perfect shot.
Our weapons and tactics were limited by Red Force rules, and in an exercise like this the Red Force is always supposed to die, but even without our AMRAAMs and data links we got eight or 10 kills, including a Typhoon. Often we had no AWACS or radar support of any kind, just our regular onboard sensors – but flying like that, ‘free hunting’, we got three kills in one afternoon. It was a pretty good experience for our first time out."
Views from South Africa..
"Gripen is pretty much as agile it can get. G onset rate at least 6 G/s (1-9 G in 1.2 s), the Gripen platform is designed with tactics in mind. Gripen fight not only with missiles and bullets but with information, superior situation awareness is the key in modern warfare..
Gripens flight computer is outstanding, and can make some worldclass calculations. Gripens Fedec are highly impressive, it even has a backup mechanical calculation system. something only a handfull of companies can manage. The air craft also incorporate a very low radar profile making it hard to find. And it has a superior data link. And in real tests against other aircrafts the radar has been found very hard to jam by other systems, meaning that it will work in practice, not only in theory. And those countrys using it have found it working in all weathers.
The radar is capable of detecting, locating, identifying and automatically tracking multiple targets in the upper and lower spheres, on the ground and sea or in the air, in all weather conditions. It can guide four air to air missiles (AMRAAM, MBDA Meteor) simultaneously at four different targets. "
The Czech Air Force had this to say after testing the first generation Gripen 2005.
"Sweden required hard discretion related to ALL Gripen abilities information, but rumors say Gripen pilots used to call fox 3 (AMRAAM engagement) farther away than viper guys. When reporters asked guys from AFB Caslav to compare our new birds with another, they answered our fighters (model C block2) are the best HW currently available on the word market."
And also
"Since 1 May we have flown over 570 missions in total [figures as of mid-October] and since 1 July when were went operational on the QRA mission we have flown over 300 missions. We are very busy and we’re flying every day. Every aircraft flies at least twice, each day. We have eight pilots at the moment and sometimes we have all eight flying – and it’s not unusual to have all 12 aircraft operational and available on the line. We have never lost a single operational mission due to a technical snag with the aircraft and every single QRA mission has gone ahead as planned."
--------------------End of quotes--------
You need to be rather ‘nationalistically thickheaded’ not to understand what a nice packet the new Gripen NG will be. One of the things people love to lift up is this macho ‘battle testing’ Well, if you test yourself against ‘third world’ technology I don’t call it ‘battle testing’ maybe ‘endurance testing’ if it comes to that. Both are important aspects of a real War against a technological peer, but remember, Americans still haven’t ‘invaded’ any true technological peer, and, may I add, hopefully never will. As that as I see it would be the end of what we all trust in, democracy and a free society.
http://www.gripen.com/en/GripenFighter/The+Future+is+Gripen+NG/GripenNG.htm