In the lead-up to last year’s federal election, Defence Department officials intentionally dodged repeated requests from Parliament’s budgetary watchdog to sit down and discuss the true cost of the F-35 stealth fighter program.
Newly released internal emails show that’s because they were awaiting approval from the top echelons of government to meet with Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page and his staff — approval that never materialized.
Then, once an explosive report from the PBO was released, estimating the jets to be twice as expensive as the government’s claim, defence officials worked overtime to undermine its credibility.
The revelations raise new questions over why senior bureaucrats — or the Conservative government — stonewalled and attacked the PBO in the weeks before an election during which the F-35 figured prominently.
They also emerge as Page finds himself in a new fight with National Defence and other departments over their refusal to explain what programs and services will be cut as the federal government moves to slash billions in spending.
In October 2010, the House of Commons finance committee tasked the PBO with providing an independent cost estimate of the Conservative government’s plan to purchase 65 F-35s, which National Defence pegged at $16 billion over 20 years.
Defence officials provided some documents to the PBO’s main researcher, Peter Weltman, that December, and promised to co-operate with Weltman as he prepared his final report.
On Jan. 31, 2011, Weltman called the air force’s director of air requirements, Col. Randy Meiklejohn, with some further questions and requested a meeting to get a handle on how National Defence came up with its $16-billion figure for the F-35s.
“He has asked to meet with both of us sometime this week or next pending your availability with a view to discussing the cost breakdown and any lingering (technical) issues he might have,” Meiklejohn wrote to Col. Dave Burt, the officer in charge of the F-35 program.
Meiklejohn went on to note in the email that “we are committed to mtg. (meeting) with the PBO,” but that the two air force officers would have to get authorization “from higher” first.
Like Meiklejohn, Burt appeared inclined to have the meeting, as did others further up the chain of command.
But the request stalled on Feb. 3, 2011, when the department’s civilian head, deputy minister Robert Fonberg, wrote: “I’d like advice from PCO on how to handle.” ....