Halifax Tar
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
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I am tracking 3 carries in Chinese Army Navy service:
Type 001, 002 and 003. All currently listed as active.
Type 001, 002 and 003. All currently listed as active.

Ive been using one for a while - its called the TAPV.@PrairieFella the question becomes what is the cost increase of maintaining this two fleets for the off set cost of the lower tier jets and at what loss of capability. Would you want to be in a tank who's primary benefit was low cost?
@PrairieFella the question becomes what is the cost increase of maintaining this two fleets for the off set cost of the lower tier jets and at what loss of capability.
Or 'private' 'research' or 'fishing' vessels.China basically decided that it was a "Near-Arctic state". Whatever the heck that means. They have decided that they now have Arctic interests and get to play. For now, a lot of it is co-operating with Russia. But I think we should anticipate Chinese naval forces acting independently in the Arctic. And that might even include aircraft carriers some day. So maybe not the PLAAF. But the PLANAF.
Or 'private' 'research' or 'fishing' vessels.
Does the The F35 not have the capability to transmit on Link 16, but they loose their stealth?Yep. F-35s use MADL. Everybody else on Link 16. So you need a translator (some kind of AEWC or BACN) just to integrate Gripens and F-35s. Oh and the Saab AEWC candidate isn't MADL capable.
You've essentially convinced me of the wrongess of the Gripen for the RCAF outweighing the rightness of a Saab partnership for Canada- specifically with respect to getting involved in the bolded. Is there a path to getting the best of both worlds?It's actually way worse than that when you consider opportunity cost. The only practical way to pull off a dual fleet is to buy a larger fleet. So in addition to the additional burden from duplication, more resources go to simply fielding more.
This takes away capital and personnel from the RCAF's stated goal of moving to more autonomous platforms (like CCAs). Any induction of CCAs, more conventional large UAS (RCAF remit), 6th Gen programs would have to be put off to keep funding the two fighter fleets.
Last month, the High Commissioner to London announced we might be getting involved with GCAP. Saab is not part of that program, and Sweden has stated they will not make any announcement on whether they join or not until 2031.You've essentially convinced me of the wrongess of the Gripen for the RCAF outweighing the rightness of a Saab partnership for Canada- specifically with respect to getting involved in the bolded. Is there a path to getting the best of both worlds?
You've essentially convinced me of the wrongess of the Gripen for the RCAF outweighing the rightness of a Saab partnership for Canada- specifically with respect to getting involved in the bolded. Is there a path to getting the best of both worlds?
Fair. Thanks for the good explanation.It's actually way worse than that when you consider opportunity cost. The only practical way to pull off a dual fleet is to buy a larger fleet. So in addition to the additional burden from duplication, more resources go to simply fielding more.
This takes away capital and personnel from the RCAF's stated goal of moving to more autonomous platforms (like CCAs). Any induction of CCAs, more conventional large UAS (RCAF remit), 6th Gen programs would have to be put off to keep funding the two fighter fleets.
I predict the public appetite for spending on defence will wither long before we need to worry about 6th gen fighters, particularly if defense dollars are heading out of country while jobs are being lost here.Not sure exactly what you're asking. There's no path to fielding not fighters in total now and inducting 6th gen early. This whole Gripen thing means the RCAF will probably be inducting Gripens 2030-2031 till 2034-2035. There's not going to be much institutional appetite or bandwidth to start a 6th gen transition just five years later.
Personally, I think they could cult the F-35 to 70 and immediately announce we are joining GCAP. We can live with a slightly smaller fighter fleet for a few years.
"Cadillac 'elicopters" come to mind?I predict the public appetite for spending on defence will wither long before we need to worry about 6th gen fighters, particularly if defense dollars are heading out of country while jobs are being lost here.
Not sure exactly what you're asking. There's no path to fielding not fighters in total now and inducting 6th gen early. This whole Gripen thing means the RCAF will probably be inducting Gripens 2030-2031 till 2034-2035. There's not going to be much institutional appetite or bandwidth to start a 6th gen transition just five years later.
Personally, I think they could cult the F-35 to 70 and immediately announce we are joining GCAP. We can live with a slightly smaller fighter fleet for a few years.
Last month, the High Commissioner to London announced we might be getting involved with GCAP. Saab is not part of that program, and Sweden has stated they will not make any announcement on whether they join or not until 2031.
How is that done? Can I track stuff from home?I am tracking 3 carries in Chinese Army Navy service:
Type 001, 002 and 003. All currently listed as active.
Fitted for, AND with.With or without RPGs, ManPADs and drones.
I’m pretty much convinced that by the time GCAP is viable Canada will have decided that defense isn’t a priority and the ‘interim’ AC will rust out. Regardless what that platform is.We join GCAP without buying Gripens. And Saab has stated a minimum order of 72 is required for a factory in Canada.
Its an interesting tack, the belief that the SAAB angle has more behind the scenes than what's being presented to us out in the open.I remain convinced/ hopeful that the Saab discussion has a lot more depth than people are giving it credit for. I think people are letting their contempt for Joly/the LPC/elbows up and the obviousness of the pure fighter/fighter vs fighter decision cause them to underestimate the combined acumen of Carney and Fuhr and overlook that their just might be a suitably ambitious big picture trade off worth considering, with fielding Gripen being a big part of the current "ante".
*Us and the Swedes are considering a broader aerospace partnership. Both us and the Swedes are "considering" but uncommitted to GCAP. Germans/Airbus are reportedly considering leaving FCAS to work with the Swedes. It's not too much of a stretch to conclude that 1+1+1= 3 and there's another option than GCAP being considered.
- Layer 1 - Assembling Gripen's with the hope to add our weight (Freeland as advisor?) to get Ukraine to more than double the output of the factory
- Layer 2- Bombardier gets the assembly and some material portion of the broader Global Eye supply chain comes to Canada. A Canada-Saab partnership works hard to finalize the Global Eye as the defacto AEW&C aircraft for NATO/Europe (20-40 airframes)
- Layer 2A- Bombardier and Saab begin work on an MPA as the generational replacement for Poseidon
- Layer 3- we invest in and partner with them to collectively become a bigger player in the autonomous /CCA space
- Layer 4- we invest in and partner with them in 6th Gen*
So what I'm asking is- can we get layer 2,3 and 4 without layer 1 and paying the full Ante
