- Reaction score
- 146
- Points
- 710
From long-time program critic Bill Sweetman of AvWeek:
Mark
Ottawa
…
Canadians were surprised when a leaked Oct. 27 briefing from the Joint Strike Fighter program office director, U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan, referred, almost casually, to a proposal under which Canada would receive four F-35As next year. The plan was due to be formalized this month with a letter of intent from Canada and notification to Congress.
September’s decision to start a life-extension plan for the Canadian F/A-18 fleet seemed to confirm reports this summer that Prime Minister Stephen Harper was close to announcing a non-competitive F-35 buy, but that the government then decided that it would be bad for its chances in next year’s elections. But Bogdan’s disclosure has made people wonder.
The proposal was puzzling. The letter of intent would require multiple ministerial sign-offs in Canada, and that, according to the Canadian government, had not happened by Nov. 7. Crews of any F-35s delivered to Canada would be restricted to training at U.S. bases until their country bought more aircraft, which would not be handed over before 2018.
Any aircraft to be delivered to Canada in 2015 were funded by the U.S. Congress on the grounds that they were essential to the program’s goal of reaching initial operational capability (IOC) with the U.S. Air Force. Indeed, aircraft availability is still a risk factor for hitting the August 2016 IOC target. Why transfer them to Canada, where they would not provide any operational capability? The only clear effect would be to give Harper a way to lock in the deal before the election, but that’s not the Pentagon’s job…
http://aviationweek.com/defense/opinion-pentagon-moves-complicate-fighter-plans?NL=AW-05&Issue=AW-05_20141117_AW-05_483&YM_RID=%27email%27&YM_MID=%27mmid%27&sfvc4enews=42&cl=article_1
Mark
Ottawa