SupersonicMax said:
You are thinking Canada going up against 1 country. That's not normally how it works for us, and in our aviation history, we have never gone against a country on our own. We have support from other countries through a coalition. Those platforms exists and support the coalition. I know, it would be NICE to have all those capabilities for us and be able to be independent of big brother. However, that's not going to happen. We need to make choices. So, what would we rather have? A kick *** deployable IADS with UAS? Or a capable fighter force?
All the support roles (SEAD, Airborne C2, most of the Tankers, etc) are provided by other countries, mostly the US. I think you misunderstand how air operates in a more conventional role: in a package where all the support elements are included to protect the strikers, with a fairly complex fallout plan and very precise go-no-go criteria. And that package is not going to be strictly Canadian, unfortunately. But that's our reality.
How many of those we have in our inventory? That's what I tought....
A Patriot missile system costs $2-3 million/launcher. For a Regiment of 3 batteries of 6 launchers complete with radar suites would then cost approximately $60 million (give or take). Therein, we could buy 3 complete regiments worth of systems (LFWA, LFCA, SQFT) for $180-200 million. Each Regiment (Battalion in US verbiage) would be a total of 600 PYs, including support staff, for a total of 1800 all ranks (in 3 Regiments, or a total of 9 Patriot batteries). The manning is based on US manning, so we could assume relatively safely that the 600/Regiment would be lower in our forces. Stinger missiles cost $38000/missile, or the costs of 4 flight hours of a 35. In sum, for the cost of 1.5-2 F 35s we could afford an entire GBAD Bde. That would be deployable. That could defend vital points in all parts of Canada.
For foreign deployments I wasn't thinking about canada going against one country... clearly we would be in a coalition, be it US led (more than likely) or British led. And you're right, we do have support through the other countries in a coalition- it is safe to say that the US or British would do 99% of the air supremacy operations, with maybe Canadians playing a "carry the flag" role like in Desert Storm. So, no requirement for Gen 5 fighters for expeditionary ops aside from a minor at most "show the flag" or to provide CAS/AI. In a coalition operation, as such, we would really have more of a requirement for an ISR and strike platform which could be more cheaply done (and some might say more effectively) through a UCAV system with better ISR packages and better loiter time. Pilot training would be easier on an UAS also, meaning cost savings and the pilots could remain in Canada meaning more savings. At $5-10 million per Reaper we could lOSE 10-13 of them operationally for the same cost as a F-35, with none of the strategic problems of having pilots KIA or being shown on the nightly news of some foreign agency.
However.... GBAD being an army asset would not be provided for Canada aside from incidental coverage. With the main threats being C-RAM, Counter-UAS (mini and small) and ballistic missiles, on expeditionary ops there's more of a requirement to ensure our freedom of movement and survivability. There's no real determinable fixed wing threat to deployed Canadian forces, particularly in lieu of the fact that we would be in a US or Brit coalition, but a very real C-RAM, missile, and UAS threat.
So to answer your question- would I rather have a kick *** IADS and UAS/UCAV or a capable fighter force? Domestic operations a CAPABLE (not necessarily F 35s) fighter force is preferable. Expeditionary ops, ESPECIALLY in a US or British coalition I would rather have IADS and UAS, along with targeteers. For the money we'd save on the F-35s we could throw HIMARS in there too.
On a side note- How many of what do we have in our inventory?
side note 2- Gen 5 or 4 fighters from foreign countries do not currently have the range to fly through the arctic or across the Pacific, hit targets and fly back. Ipso facto, the only thing that could do that is a long range bomber or ICBM. A bear bomber WOULD be picked up on radar and identified WELL before it got close to anywhere of strategic value (Southern Canada from Edmonton down) that would be worth sending said bomber in the first place. As such, there would be significant time to ID this threat, even for a UAS. A Gen 4 fighter would be better for this, but it COULD be an option if neccessary. Or GBAD (assuming the Russians or Chinese dont go all "Red Dawn" and just arbitrarily attack North America).