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Which Of These 5 Planes Will Be Canada's New Fighter Jet?

Kailash Kumar

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F-35 vs. the Rest: Which Of These 5 Planes Will Be Canada's New Fighter Jet?

And this could get very interesting indeed.

November 11, 2018

The Canadian government just released a draft tender seeking information from five companies who will compete for the eighty-eight-jet, $26 billion (USD $20 billion) order. The contenders will likely be the Eurofighter Typhoon, France’s Dassault Rafale, Sweden’s Saab Gripen, and for the United States, Boeing’s F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet and Lockheed Martin’s F-35. The actual bidding is supposed to begin in May 2019, with the aircraft entering service in the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) by the mid-2020s.

How to replace Canada’s thirty-five-year-old CF-18s—the Canadian version of the U.S. F/A-18 Hornet—has been a political hot potato juggled between Canada’s political parties, as well as the Trump administration and Canada.

The twists and turns in the saga include Canada nixing a proposed buy of Super Hornet last year after the Trump administration imposed tariffs on Canadian aircraft maker Bombardier. Ottawa now plans to buy twenty-five used F/A-18 Hornets from Australia as a stopgap until a brand-new fighter jet is selected. At the same time, Canada ponied up another C$54 million (US$41 million) to remain a member of the international F-35 consortium, to which Canada has contributed a half-billion dollars over the past twenty years.

As if that wasn’t enough, the current Liberal party government just changed the bidding requirements , put out by the previous Conservative party government and thought to favor the F-35, in favor of new requirements that will make it easier for European companies to win the fighter contract.

The issue “has become extremely politicized as the current government tries to find ways to meet its election campaign promises of holding an open and transparent competition but not buying the F-35,” David Stone, a defense expert at the Canadian Forces College in Toronto, told the National Interest. “They now realize that they cannot actually exclude the F-35 if they are to hold an open and transparent competition.”

Stone sees the Canadian government having to grapple with two issues. One involves offsets, or how much the winning aircraft manufacturer will invest in Canada. “This will be complicated on the government side because the MOU [memorandum of understanding] for belonging to the F-35 Consortium indicates nations agree that there will be no offsets. Should the government choose the F-35, it must be able to have a narrative that indicates it is getting more benefit from the opportunity to be part of the supply chain for all F-35s, versus getting benefits for just 88 [Canadian] planes. Should government choose a different aircraft, they will need to have a narrative to deal with the loss of business opportunity to all of those industries now part of the F-35 development supply chain.”

Then there is the fact that 2019 is an election year that will inevitably make the fighter competition a political issue. “It is further complicated for Canadians because former Canadian Forces officers are indicating their support or not for the F-35 on issues like a single engine, interoperability, etc.,” Stone says. “For example, the test pilots for the F-35 and the Super Hornet are both past F-18 Squadron Commanders in the RCAF.”

Missing from all the politicking and economics is a discussion over which aircraft is actually better for Canada, which preferred the original CF-18 in part because it had two engines rather than single-engine planes such as the F-15, F-16 and French Mirage F-1 (the F-35 also has one engine). One consideration is that the RCAF has to patrol and protect a vast swathe of Arctic territory, a region rich in mineral resources and shipping routes that are coveted by multiple nations, including Russia and the United States.

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/b...-planes-will-be-canadas-new-fighter-jet-35717
 
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If I were Canada government I pick Eurofighter Typhoon and buy from Britain. Canada and Britain have the same monarch, and English as official language. America don't have English as official language and they are turning Spanish.
 
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If I were Canada government I pick Eurofighter Typhoon and buy from Britain. Canada and Britain have the same monarch, and English as official language. America don't have English as official language and they are turning Spanish.

You do know Canada is Republicize or (Federalized) and not having the same Regal of the United Kingdom. Canada see QE2 as the head of commonwealth (which Canada belong to) and unlike other Commonwealth country that still yet to Republicize or Federalize (Such as Australia or New Zealand), which up hold Queen Elizabeth the Second as the regal of the United Kingdom and its Dominion. Which mean while Australia or the Like would see QE2 as Queen of England and the United Kingdom and hence the Queen of Australia, the people in Canada would only see QE2 as Queen of England and the United Kingdoms and not the Queen of Canada, but also the head of Commonwealth.

If you compare the official title of the Queen between Canadian Parliament and Australian Parliament

In Canada, the Queen was addressed to

"Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith."

In Austrlaia, the Queen was addressed to

"Her Majesty Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, Queen of Australia and Her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth."

So, no, you don't have the same monarch as Britain.
 
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If I were Canada government I pick Eurofighter Typhoon and buy from Britain. Canada and Britain have the same monarch, and English as official language. America don't have English as official language and they are turning Spanish.

From when did countries started choosing fighter jets on what official language is ?
 
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You do know Canada is Republicize or (Federalized) and not having the same Regal of the United Kingdom. Canada see QE2 as the head of commonwealth (which Canada belong to) and unlike other Commonwealth country that still yet to Republicize or Federalize (Such as Australia or New Zealand), which up hold Queen Elizabeth the Second as the regal of the United Kingdom and its Dominion. Which mean while Australia or the Like would see QE2 as Queen of England and the United Kingdom and hence the Queen of Australia, the people in Canada would only see QE2 as Queen of England and the United Kingdoms and not the Queen of Canada, but also the head of Commonwealth.

If you compare the official title of the Queen between Canadian Parliament and Australian Parliament

In Canada, the Queen was addressed to

"Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith."

In Austrlaia, the Queen was addressed to

"Her Majesty Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, Queen of Australia and Her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth."

So, no, you don't have the same monarch as Britain.

The maple leaf on Canada flag is a stylized crown. Canada lives and breathes monarchy. Canada and Britain share culture and history, not with America the rebel country now turning Spanish.

So, no, you don't have the same monarch as Britain.

Beep. Wrong.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarchy_of_Canada

From when did countries started choosing fighter jets on what official language is ?

Austria picked Typhoon from Germany based on official language being German.
 
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The maple leaf on Canada flag is a stylized crown. Canada lives and breathes monarchy. Canada and Britain share culture and history, not with America the rebel country now turning Spanish.

Again, you do know Only 58% of Canadian speak English as primary language, compare to 80.4% in the US.

How is it more "relatable" to Britain when most of Canada speak French?


wow, you never actually read your own source now, does it?

Just read your article, skip over to the head of state part, and tell me what it said?
 
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