OldSolduer
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I made this point on a thread a few days ago where all the contributors are all swooning over the Gripen. A 5th Gen fighter in all likelihood maul it decisively.

Unfortunately the question that remains to be answered is if the GoC cares about capabilities, or just spending monies.I made this point on a thread a few days ago where all the contributors are all swooning over the Gripen. A 5th Gen fighter in all likelihood maul it decisively.
I'll start be again saying that I'm on team F-35. Get all 88 (I wish it was more), BUT I stand by my opinion that (beyond the logistical and training burden) a split fleet of say 65 x F-35's and 65 x Gripens wouldn't be the end-of-the-World scenario operationally that some seem to suggest.NORAD isn't a first strike command however, it's something to realize that Russian bombers incursions into our airspace are typically escorted by their own fighters. Currently those are last generation SU-35's typically however, Russia is actively producing its own 5th generation SU-57 fighter that while likely stacking up poorly against the F-22/F-35, is an exceptionally dangerous adversary for 4th generation fighters like the F-16, F-15 and Gripen. 5th generation platforms are being developed and sold abroad by/to adversary nations, the future is already here and it makes little sense to address that by.......buying an aircraft already behind the times? Sitting back and expecting the status quo to remain such for the next four decades or more does not seem responsible.
It's also something to put out there that the RCAF has a history of expeditionary operations with the CF-18 which has the potential to put us up against increasingly advanced hostile SAM, drone and fighter threats abroad. A 5th generation stealth aircraft is leagues more survivable against threats at home and abroad. The RCAF deployed in the Gulf War, Yugoslavia, Libya, fighting against ISIL, etc. With tensions flaring abroad and our Govt in trade/relation building talks with countless nations, I wouldn't expect the RCAF to be sitting on its hands in the coming decades. You could do this work with an aircraft like the Gripen however, you are fundamentally bringing a much less interoperable, safe and capable platform to the table to do so. Given the breadth of allied F-35 operators (Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, South Korea, UK, US currently with Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Greece, Romania planned for the future), arriving in Europe or elsewhere with a fundamentally interoperable aircraft is an advantage hard to put into words.
F-35 isn't some crazy new capability for many nations, it's simply the new norm and has been for quite sometime.
a split fleet of say 65 x F-35's and 65 x Gripens wouldn't be the end-of-the-World scenario operationally that some seem to suggest.
That ignores the reality that the latest 4.5 Gen fighters have similar sensor and EW capabilities, and are simply more detectable by some radars.I made this point on a thread a few days ago where all the contributors are all swooning over the Gripen. A 5th Gen fighter in all likelihood maul it decisively.
FTFY...Unfortunately the question that remains to be answered is if the GoC cares about capabilities, or just spending monies in countries that are being actively hostile to our economny and have threatened our sovereignty.
Why does no one on here care to look beyond the simplest form of collaboration with SAAB as being the Gripen E and not towards anything out into the future that may move well beyond the Gripen E?Unfortunately the question that remains to be answered is if the GoC cares about capabilities, or just spending monies.
Historically capabilities have taken a back seat.
The US has been in the flying of stealth aircraft business for more than four decades.Why does no one on here care to look beyond the simplest form of collaboration with SAAB as being the Gripen E and not towards anything out into the future that may move well beyond the Gripen E?
The sobering reality is the money spent on the US Aerospace Industry is larger than the Canadian GDP, when you look at what the companies IRD, DoD and DARPA funding to remain ahead of the competition.Pretty much everyone is stuck on the here and now, and not willing or able to look 10+yrs into the future.
Now I would suggest that Canada look toward Europe as the next potential option AFTER the F-35, but I would not be sinking any money into SAAB for Fighters now or in 2-3 decades.Someone last week on another thread here posted a graphical representative of the decline of Entrepreneurship in Canada and lamented about it.
The key point, the focal point, in entrepreneurship is RISK TAKING, followed closely by picking one's self off the floor when failure occurs and trying again and again until you succeed. All that I'm reading about on this thread is zero risk taking, bowing down to the F35 (which is an amazing airframe that we DO need to have in substantial numbers) and continuing to allow others to do all the risk taking (and ALL the rewards and profits) and we merely cut them cheque for their efforts and buy whatever they put in front of our faces. Then when this occurs we cry about not getting enough of the crumbs, our 3% of the total value of an airframe, and threaten to pick our one toy and go home.
audentes Fortuna iuvat
qui audet adipiscitur
All valid points - all of them. But it doesn't mean that we should be sitting back doing nothing. There is a potential attempt to be partnering with SAAB, for exactly what is an unknown, but there is no reason why this should not be explored further and see where it may lead to.The US has been in the flying of stealth aircraft business for more than four decades.
LocMart brought the F 117A to the USAF in operational squadrons in the early 80's.
Northrop Grumman's B2 went into service in 1997.
LocMart brought the F-22 Raptor to the USAF in 2005 -- two decades later it is still the most advanced fighter flying - and outclasses the F-35, let alone anything else in the air.
Guess how many entities have actual stealth aircraft in operation currently?
1, that that is Boeing - yet another US defense giant.
The SU-57 isn't a stealth aircraft -- it is a boogeyman that people roll out to drive DoD and US MIC spending, it has the radar signature of the giant ass gun tractor y'all bought for the M777.
The Chinese are the closest - but they are not there yet.
Europe remains to be seen, as they have not trotted out anything past a Gen 4 Fighter.
The sobering reality is the money spent on the US Aerospace Industry is larger than the Canadian GDP, when you look at what the companies IRD, DoD and DARPA funding to remain ahead of the competition.
Attempting to chase the dragon in an economy as small as Canada (or as small as Canada partnered with Sweden) will bankrupt you both.
Now I would suggest that Canada look toward Europe as the next potential option AFTER the F-35, but I would not be sinking any money into SAAB for Fighters now or in 2-3 decades.
I suspect the Gen 6 Aircraft Field will come down to the F-47, and GCAP (BAE/Mitsubishi), but I doubt that GCAP will be flying by 2035 in anything beyond a prototype. I am also not sure beyond sensor/processor/bandwidth aspects if either will actually offer anything beyond what the F-22 does today.
Canada is a small defense market, without something truly revolutionary domestically produced, the best option for Canada is to work as a partner with larger aligned nations - spreading risks and rewards, but not jumping into an airframe that realistically is past its shelf life - and has no reasonable expectations of advances.
So in a simulated combat situation, with undisclosed rules(often set to make the "good" guys win), in concert with F-22s, the F-35 is really good.
How is that relevant to Canada? NORAD isn't a first strike command. Canada doesn't integrate into the USAF in that way to hit enemy targets.
It's a cherry picked stat to bolster one particular viewpoint, that disregards all of the caveats.
Canada doesn’t buy enough fighter aircraft to support any sort of industry for that.All valid points - all of them. But it doesn't mean that we should be sitting back doing nothing. There is a potential attempt to be partnering with SAAB, for exactly what is an unknown, but there is no reason why this should not be explored further and see where it may lead to.
The truth is before Trump, NO ONE gave a rats fart about the Gripen, then TRump talks shit, Canadians get all pearl clutching and now they are suddenly finding new reasons to invest in SAAB, Gripen, our own aircraft industry, etc.The US has been in the flying of stealth aircraft business for more than four decades.
LocMart brought the F 117A to the USAF in operational squadrons in the early 80's.
Northrop Grumman's B2 went into service in 1997.
LocMart brought the F-22 Raptor to the USAF in 2005 -- two decades later it is still the most advanced fighter flying - and outclasses the F-35, let alone anything else in the air.
Guess how many entities have actual stealth aircraft in operation currently?
1, that that is Boeing - yet another US defense giant.
The SU-57 isn't a stealth aircraft -- it is a boogeyman that people roll out to drive DoD and US MIC spending, it has the radar signature of the giant ass gun tractor y'all bought for the M777.
The Chinese are the closest - but they are not there yet.
Europe remains to be seen, as they have not trotted out anything past a Gen 4 Fighter.
The sobering reality is the money spent on the US Aerospace Industry is larger than the Canadian GDP, when you look at what the companies IRD, DoD and DARPA funding to remain ahead of the competition.
Attempting to chase the dragon in an economy as small as Canada (or as small as Canada partnered with Sweden) will bankrupt you both.
Now I would suggest that Canada look toward Europe as the next potential option AFTER the F-35, but I would not be sinking any money into SAAB for Fighters now or in 2-3 decades.
I suspect the Gen 6 Aircraft Field will come down to the F-47, and GCAP (BAE/Mitsubishi), but I doubt that GCAP will be flying by 2035 in anything beyond a prototype. I am also not sure beyond sensor/processor/bandwidth aspects if either will actually offer anything beyond what the F-22 does today.
Canada is a small defense market, without something truly revolutionary domestically produced, the best option for Canada is to work as a partner with larger aligned nations - spreading risks and rewards, but not jumping into an airframe that realistically is past its shelf life - and has no reasonable expectations of advances.
Great point, the Gripen E has far more advanced sensors and sensor integration than the older kn3s that dod pretty well. So its pretty safe to assume that the E would have a far better score.
It's as good of an assumption as trusting the 20:1 number from 2017 is still relevant.
The truth is before Trump, NO ONE gave a rats fart about the Gripen, then TRump talks shit, Canadians get all pearl clutching and now they are suddenly finding new reasons to invest in SAAB, Gripen, our own aircraft industry, etc.
Canadian reality. When Trump is gone, and if no obvious direct threat (or scary republicans), then Canadians will go back to big no on anything defence spending and lets go all in on social programs again.
Not to bring politics into this discussion but lets face it, the aircraft purchase "review" has become all political now. Nothing to do witjh capability, interoperability or anything military.
Thank you for that, not being an air guy, I wasn’t sure how me saying something similar would go over.You're clearly not an air or fighter/weapons community guy. That's the benchmark exercise for NATO because it's the one that is less scripted and has the most dissimilar platform interaction. It's probably the closest thing the west has to actual wars. And the last time a plane scored this well at introduction with Red Flag, it's real life record turned out to be fantastic. I believe the first F-15s had something like 13:1 during its first Red Flag.
Also, this "first strike" stuff is ignorant bullshit. Honestly surprised to see such low quality assertions on here. Stealth is a design philosophy that improves survivability regardless of what the platform is doing. That same stealth that helps on a strategic strike mission ensures that the aircraft is also far more survivable during Defensive Counter Air.
You're right, as a sailor I am not in the air weapons community... Brilliant observation.You're clearly not an air or fighter/weapons community guy. That's the benchmark exercise for NATO because it's the one that is less scripted and has the most dissimilar platform interaction. It's probably the closest thing the west has to actual wars. And the last time a plane scored this well at introduction with Red Flag, it's real life record turned out to be fantastic. I believe the first F-15s had something like 13:1 during its first Red Flag.
Also, this "first strike" stuff is ignorant bullshit. Honestly surprised to see such low quality assertions on here. Stealth is a design philosophy that improves survivability regardless of what the platform is doing. That same stealth that helps on a strategic strike mission ensures that the aircraft is also far more survivable during Defensive Counter Air.
