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Norwegian F-35s Test GBU-31 JDAM Bombs to Enhance NATO Precision-Strike Readiness in the High North.
Royal Norwegian Air Force F-35A fighters conducted a live-fire exercise in Norway, releasing four GBU-31 Joint Direct Attack Munition bombs during a NATO-linked training event. The drill highlights how Norway’s fully delivered fleet of 52 F-35s is strengthening NATO precision-strike capability and deterrence across the increasingly strategic High North.
On March 9, 2026, NATO Allied Air Command reported that Royal Norwegian Air Force F-35A fighters conducted a live-fire exercise in Norway, during which two aircraft released four GBU-31 Joint Direct Attack Munition bombs. The drill demonstrated the aircraft’s ability to deliver heavy precision weapons during close-air support and long-range strike scenarios while operating in the demanding conditions of the High North. Norway recently completed delivery of all 52 F-35As in its planned fleet, making it the first F-35 partner nation to finish its full acquisition program. The exercise highlights how the stealth fighter’s advanced sensors, targeting systems, and precision munitions are being integrated into NATO operations to reinforce deterrence and operational readiness across northern Europe and the Arctic approaches.
Royal Norwegian Air Force F-35A fighters conducted a live-fire exercise releasing GBU-31 JDAM bombs, demonstrating NATO’s growing precision-strike capability and deterrence posture in the strategically important High North (Picture Source: NATO Allied Air Command)
The choice of weapon gives the exercise much of its operational significance. The GBU-31 is the 2,000-pound class member of the JDAM family, a weapon created by adding a guidance tail kit to existing unguided bombs. Official U.S. reports describe JDAM as a system combining an inertial navigation system with GPS guidance, allowing aircraft to convert conventional free-fall bombs into precision munitions able to strike accurately in adverse weather. That feature is particularly important in Norway, where climate, visibility and cloud cover can complicate air operations and reduce the usefulness of systems that depend on continuous visual tracking or laser designation.
The GBU-31 is also notable because its heavy warhead gives it relevance against a broad range of fixed targets. Depending on the bomb body used, it can be configured around a general-purpose Mk 84 or a harder-target penetrator such as the BLU-109, giving planners options against infrastructure, bunkers, logistics nodes, command posts or other reinforced objectives. What makes the munition so widely used is precisely this combination of relatively simple guidance, all-weather accuracy and substantial destructive effect. In a high-intensity environment, it offers a practical balance between cost, availability and military effect, which explains why it remains one of the most common precision-guided bombs in Western inventories.
The aircraft seen in the footage adds another layer of meaning. The F-35A is the conventional takeoff and landing version of the Lightning II family and is designed as a multirole stealth fighter able to combine strike, air defense, surveillance and data-sharing functions in a single platform. Lockheed Martin lists a top speed of Mach 1.6 for the F-35A and emphasizes the aircraft’s low observable design, advanced sensors, information fusion and network connectivity. In operational terms, this means the jet is not simply carrying bombs to a target area. It is also gathering data, building a clearer tactical picture, sharing information across the force and improving the speed and quality of targeting decisions.
That is why the release of four GBU-31 bombs from two F-35s should be read as more than a routine range event. A live-fire mission of this type involves mission planning, target coordinate generation, weapons programming, range control, release timing, safety procedures and post-strike evaluation. It allows pilots and planners to rehearse the full strike chain under realistic conditions. In one scenario, those skills can support close-air support missions in which aircraft must deliver accurate fire in support of troops on the ground. In another, they can underpin deeper strike profiles against high-value fixed targets farther behind the front line. The same sortie therefore strengthens tactical proficiency while also reinforcing higher-end strike readiness. The F-35’s design makes it especially suited to this kind of mission because the aircraft can operate as both a sensor and a shooter inside a broader NATO force package.
The Norwegian setting gives the exercise a wider strategic dimension. The High North has become an increasingly important theater in NATO planning because it connects the Arctic and North Atlantic with the northern approaches to Europe while lying close to critical Russian military infrastructure. In such an environment, deterrence is not based only on owning modern equipment. It also depends on demonstrating that aircraft, munitions, crews and command arrangements are ready to operate together in realistic regional conditions. A short video of bomb release may appear limited in scope, but it fits into a broader pattern of alliance signaling in which live-fire training is used to underline combat credibility and readiness on exposed flanks. The fact that Norway now fields its full F-35 force only reinforces that message.
Seen in that light, the footage released by NATO Allied Air Command is valuable because it compresses several layers of meaning into one brief sequence. At the tactical level, it shows Norwegian pilots employing a heavy precision-guided bomb with an aircraft built for contested operations. At the operational level, it reflects training for missions that can range from close support to deeper strike. At the strategic level, it signals that NATO’s northern flank is supported by an air force equipped with stealth aircraft, all-weather precision weapons and the training needed to use them effectively. The exercise therefore says less about a one-off bomb drop than about the steady maturation of Norway’s F-35 force into a fully operational contributor to allied deterrence in one of Europe’s most sensitive regions.
The significance of this drill lies not only in the release of four GBU-31 bombs, but in what that release represents. It shows a force pairing a 2,000-pound GPS-guided precision weapon with a fifth-generation fighter designed to detect, share and strike in demanding environments. It also illustrates how Norway is using its F-35A fleet not just for air policing or sovereignty patrols, but for realistic live-fire training aligned with NATO’s broader need to maintain a credible strike posture in the High North. As regional competition intensifies and northern security takes on greater importance, this kind of exercise offers a concise but meaningful demonstration of readiness, precision and deterrence.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.