Remember when I said I was worried? Once Joli started openly lobbying and they had Bombardier on side, that's when I started getting worried.
With the rumoured numbers, I wonder if we make an asymmetric fleet. Gripens at both bases. Panthers all in Cold Lake.
I don't see how the Americans won't be upset. The only question is whether the retaliation will be just economic or we get hurt on the military relationship.
I am more worried at this point than I was awhile ago however, I will point out that we are only hearing one side of the story here. Of course Bombardier, Saab and people like Mélanie Joly have a direct bias towards the Gripen, but none of them most importantly are the RCAF or many within Govt, who have previously rejected the Gripen in favour of the F-35. Joly has a bunch of Bombardier facilities in her own riding if I recall correctly, so there is potentially some conflicts of interests going on here as well. Of course the Minister of Industry wants more industry in Canada, but she has no clue regarding the viability or military feasibility of such a plan.
The RCAF seemingly wants not part of this, and there is very obviously fears within Govt that this kind of "renegging" or "fence sitting" deal will seriously aggravate the Trump admin.
Dont forget the Swedes are offering full tech transfer, supporting the fleet becomes a lot easier then
Good for Saab and us if we decide to order/buy the jet however, I'm not sure at the end of the day there is too much value in a full tech transfer for a jet design that was originally produced in the late 1980's and has seen infamous market failings over the past decade. It's very much attaching yourself to yesterdays product, when it wasn't even a particularly hot success back then.
Saab also has plans on a UCAV variant of the Gripen E (Loyal wingman anyone?), what are the chances this is the reason why they want to build here.
A UCAV variant of the Gripen E would be a pretty bad platform, considering you are only saving on the life support and pilot hosting equipment/space while having to work around a dated, manned aircraft design. If Canada wants a UCAV, we'd be far better off going with a more experienced provider and definitely not converting/producing full on last gen fighters for such a role. $90M~ pricetag per unit for UCAV Gripen's would be a pretty lousy deal.
Buy 65 and tell Trump to relax.
Buy 15 Gripens and use them as replacements for the Tutors.
Buy another 4 squadrons plus replacements and use them for NATO purposes.
Gripen as a Tutor replacement is like buying your kid a LAV for their first car, sure it can get the job done but it's ungodly inefficient in basically every way possible and everybody is going to be looking at you funny. If anything, F-35's should be used for NATO purposes given the huge adoption rate compared to the Gripen.
Hypothetically if we were to go for 65 x F-35's for the NATO role and 65 x Gripens for the NORAD role we would still be one of the largest F-35 fleets (top 4-5?) so it would be hard for anyone to argue against us maintaining our parts contracts. Our NATO contribution would be much greater than our current plans (the original planned order was for 65 aircraft total to cover NORAD and NATO roles, but not simultaneously). It would be a split fleet but the total number of fighters would be about on par with our original CF-18 fleet.
Possibly more important that the actual Gripen assembly would be the R&D and production potential for domestic UAVs and CCVs which will play an increasingly important role in warfare.
I seriously question the viability and responsibility of any kind of mixed 5th-4th gen fleet for the RCAF, so I'm not going to support any split regardless of where it is adjusted to at this point or in the future. Splitting the fleet to any degree is going to ruin the benefits of either fighter, as building only 60~ Gripen's after spending billions/3-5 years flashing up a production line seems like a waste of time given the questionable number of foreign orders currently. If you want something "cheaper" to operate, you aren't getting that since you still have a 5th gen fleet to split your infrastructure and personnel between. You don't get the interoperability of a homogenous fleet of either type, and our allies in Europe or across the Southern border aren't going to be amused with a Gripen purchase in 2025.
65 would likely let us maintain our contracts, but I'd guess there will still be grumbling within the program for that workshare. As far as R&D for UAV's and CCV's and with all due respect to Saab, I'm not sure they are the best partner given their failings and inexperience within the aerospace sphere within the last decade. No stealth platforms, no real big drone developments either. Saab can likely help us at the end of the day, but I'd think some of the more experienced American or European aerospace firms would be much better choices if we wanted a partner for that type of system.
Station them in Sweden close to Saab for cover for our latvia brigade.
I see more like a cold war level increase, 10 squadrons, 4 in canada, 6 in europe.
If anything, we should be putting F-35A's into Europe to cover the Latvia Brigade given how many more F-35's are operated by NATO in the area and how much more effective it is to go up against Russia with 5th gen aircraft vs a Gripen E.