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Mark Ch's avatar

While I agree 100%, I think you ignore the key role the media played in all this. The Conservatives lost their nerve when the PBO announced that the F-35 would cost not $9B but $150B (over their 50 year life), leading to a media and public outcry.

Instead of the obvious answer, which is that any air force at all would cost essentially the same regardless of aircraft type, the media pretended, and allowed the Liberals to pretend, that this cost was specific to the F-35. And that costing over 50 years made sense.

How was it possible that any journalist even slightly interested in truthful, objective reporting fell for this? Or is it the case that only a tiny minority of Canadian journalists are even slightly interested in truthful, objective reporting?

This is a far more serious issue for Canada than our government's undoubted incompetence and lack of seriousness in military procurement and, frankly, everything else they do.

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Helmer's avatar

Excellent point Marc. Re PBO report, I recall that it used parametric analysis to estimate the full life cycle cost. This time of analysis is typically used to estimate things like the amount of concrete needed to build a 10 story building. It is a broad tool, and hardly applicable to this century fighter jets. The Auditor General report was just as bad, a swan song for the outgoing AG. And you are right, the media was served up a softball and hit it out of the park: far easier to precipitate a pointless political fight than to ask simple questions like: what the hell is parametric analysis. The f35 was always the the next gen fighter jet for Canada if capability and interoperability are the key selection criteria.

Oh, would this sensibility extend to our equally needed (and equally appalling procurement history) frigate replacement. Here is a suggestion: just buy 4 Arleigh Burkes (with sufficient C2 capability) and 15 extant frigates from the US (our most important military partner). Do not/not open the process to anything other than strictly limited and strictly monitored capability upspend by the military. Time to rip the band aid off. The shipbuilding strategy has not worked.

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