Do you seriously think that if any of the evaluation team members on the RNAF assessment team thought that they were being manipulated would stay silent? I see this promoted as a defence for 7 other JSF team members as well, that somehow the teams professional integrity stays suppressed due to a political decision. Believe me, Norway, like any democracy would have RNAF officers squealing like piglets if they thought that they were being co-erced
Regarding "squealing like piglets": The current Norwegian government decided to move a military site from south-west Norway to Northern Norway; in this process they supressed the real costs of this relocation. Somebody in the Norwegian military leaked the info to the press. The Norwegian minister of defence immediately instructed the police to investigate, since "military information had been leaked"... The opposition parties were furious -- first, because the minister had hidden the real costs of the relocation and second because she wants to press charges towards the guy who leaked the real costs to the press...
So yes, if considered important one does see people leak to the press, however it can and will cost....
I don't think anybody on the Norwegian evaluation team were manipulated -- if anybody were manipulated then perhaps it was the Swedes. It seems the Swedes were given the impression they actually had a chance of winning, whereas, in reality, they never stood a chance.
The Norwegian government (not the RNoAF) decided they needed a competition, perhaps to get a better deal with the Americans. Eurofighter was in the game, but seemed to be an "unreliable" competitior. AFAIK, at that time Gripen was not even in the competition presumably because they did not think they could win.
The Norwegian government worked hard to convince the Swedes that Gripen was a real option, and it paid off -- in the end the Swedes believed they could win, and they entered the competition.
One critical aspect of letting the Swedes believe they had a chance of winning was to create a list of specs that Gripen NG would meet -- in terms of range, payload, interoperability, etc. With regards to RCS, the requirement was that it should be significantly less than F16, but no further requirements above and beyond that, in particular there were no "VLO" requirements.
In addition to these "baseline specs", however, the planes also had to succeed in some very tough simulations. This is where Gripen (and all other 4. gen planes for that matter) failed. Only a 5. gen a/c with VLO frame and 5. gen sensor would succeed in those scenarios.
The Norwegian government could say that they had stuck to the rules -- yes, Gripen could meet the "baseline specs". Alas, there were also these simulations and here Gripen failed.
The evaluation team and RNoAF are happy, since their recommendation clearly was JSF, and the government decided to go with their recommendation.
The only unhappy ones were the Swedes...
Personally I think Gripen is a great plane -- however it is what it is. An excellent 4.5 gen multirole fighter, small, fast, maneuvrable, at a low cost. It is not a 5. gen plane capable of operating in the vicinity of double-digit Russian SAMs. Thats what the RNoAF asked for and that's what they will be getting.
I wish Saab all the best and hope NG will win several competitions, I would still like to see NG fly
V