News   Dec 05, 2025
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The coming $26 billion windfall for the Canadian Armed Forces. What to buy?

You should send the government some emails.

Gotta love the Russian propaganda that seeps in slowly and sneakily:

This is all part of Trump's plan to get NATO SUCKER NATIONS to pay for America's proxy war against Russia, a war that the United States provoked in 2014 with the US sponsored coup in Kiev
 
Gotta love the Russian propaganda that seeps in slowly and sneakily:
Instead of cheap insults why don't you tell me why Canada needs to buy HIMARS? We should not be buying military equipment that cannot conceivably be used for the defense of the Canadian mainland. Now I could make a case for long range missiles, but I wouldn't be buying them from the United States because they would be for the sole purpose of defending against the United States.

Yes, NATO countries are sucker nations. Trump has declared economic war on ALL America's "allies". No NATO country is immune and what is the response from NATO? To spend billions on American military equipment to give to Ukraine so the US can continue to prosecute its proxy war against Russia. This is handing Trump a big win-win. He can satisfy the hawks in his party who don't won't the war to stop while pacifying the large block of his supporters who oppose sending US tax dollars to Ukraine.
 
Instead of cheap insults why don't you tell me why Canada needs to buy HIMARS? We should not be buying military equipment that cannot conceivably be used for the defense of the Canadian mainland. Now I could make a case for long range missiles, but I wouldn't be buying them from the United States because they would be for the sole purpose of defending against the United States.

Yes, NATO countries are sucker nations. Trump has declared economic war on ALL America's "allies". No NATO country is immune and what is the response from NATO? To spend billions on American military equipment to give to Ukraine so the US can continue to prosecute its proxy war against Russia. This is handing Trump a big win-win. He can satisfy the hawks in his party who don't won't the war to stop while pacifying the large block of his supporters who oppose sending US tax dollars to Ukraine.
You think they're talking about HIMARS and not you calling Zelenski corrupt, or are you just trying to save face now?
 
I would expect ThyssenKrupp to get the contract, with maybe some concessions on earlier production being allocated to Canada.
I’m willing to give the Koreans fair shakes. Did Poland make a mistake with their recent Korean buy of K2 Black Panther tanks, K9 Thunder howitzers, FA-50 fighter jets, K239 Chunmoo MLRS, etc? Or Peru, did they make a mistake with their 2024 contract to buy half a billion in warships from HD Hyundai Heavy Industries? Their KAI KF-21 Boramae looks to be top drawer - maybe a better value than the F-35 (not that it's on the table).

If I was HD Hyundai Heavy Industries, I'd ask for permission from both Korea and Canada to sail my latest KSS-III submarine, the ROKS Shin Chae-ho from Korea, across the Northwest Passage to Halifax with a small group of RCN submariners and procurement types aboard. By next month the NWT Passage will be closed to shipping due to ice, and such a transit would demonstrate the KSS-III's AIP, arctic, habitation and long range capabilities. That's of course if Korea can lose a sub for a couple of months.
 
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I’m willing to give the Koreans fair shakes. Did Poland make a mistake with their recent Korean buy of K2 Black Panther tanks, K9 Thunder howitzers, FA-50 fighter jets, K239 Chunmoo MLRS, etc? Or Peru, did they make a mistake with their 2024 contract to buy half a billion in warships from HD Hyundai Heavy Industries? Their KAI KF-21 Boramae looks to be top drawer - maybe a better value than the F-35 (not that it's on the table).
You won't find many detractors of the quality of South Korea's military products. But it's one thing to invest in buying Tanks and Howitzers, and another in commiting to buy submarines. You'll be establishing a relationship for the next 50 years and relying on a supply chain that'll depend on peace in the Korean penunsila.
A lot of that can be mitigated by on-shoring a good chunk of the production but it's still a risk.
 
You'll be establishing a relationship for the next 50 years and relying on a supply chain that'll depend on peace in the Korean penunsila.
Same goes for buying from the Germans. Is Germany at greater risk of war with Russia than Korea with China? They both seem as likely or unlikely to me. Historically, Canada has deployed troops to maintain both South Korean freedom (26,000 Canadians deployed to the Korean War, over 500 KIA), and at the same time at its peak in the mid-1950s, about 10,000 Canadian troops were stationed in West Germany. Canada is well connected to both countries. With the rise of China and the coming collapse of Russia, Canada's defence needs will be looking towards the Pacific. To that end, Canada and South Korea signed a Defence Cooperation Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in 2014; and more recently, Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy (2022) lists South Korea as a key security partner.
 
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OTTAWA — A new report comparing the two contenders for Canada’s submarine contract cautions that Hanwha’s subs will likely have to be modified to meet Canadian operational requirements.
The report lands days before Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to visit a Hanwha facility in South Korea, and a week before a major maritime defence industry conference arrives in Ottawa.

The report, by analyst Stewart Webb of Defence Report, says Ottawa has framed the procurement in terms of the economic benefits and jobs the sub builders could bring to Canada — but they are selling two very different types of submarines.

The report says the political discussion surrounding the subs hasn’t touched on issues such as in-service support, whether Canada should acquire the capability to vertically launch ballistic missiles, and the extent to which Ottawa may have to revise designs to fit the navy’s requirements.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/art...k-german-sub-builder-over-south-korean-rival/

The report in question:

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https://defencereport.com/wp-conten...Submarine-Replacement-Right-DefenceReport.pdf
 
Carney toured a Korean sub today and said, "I will see you in 60 days," which suggests to me that the deal is going to Korea. I don't know why Carney would tip his hat like that. If a decision was made to buy Korean why not announce it at the APEC summit?

If indeed the contract goes to Korea, what will Canada get out of it? A Hyundai auto plant? Trump got the Koreans to agree to build a nuclear-powered sub in a Philadelphia shipyard.

 
Carney toured a Korean sub today and said, "I will see you in 60 days," which suggests to me that the deal is going to Korea. I don't know why Carney would tip his hat like that. If a decision was made to buy Korean why not announce it at the APEC summit?
Carney said that as he was climbing down the sub, so sounds like he was joking that he would be disappearing for a while.
 
This is the same argument that Gripen proponents and it'll get the same response. We don't have the personnel, infrastructure and other resources to operate multiple types without a real good reason.
Are we looking at making Gripens for other countries?


I think we’re likely stuck with the F-35 buy, as Trump would go bananas. Otherwise, if we expand the RCAF we could operate two fighter types. Until we went all in on the Hornets, the albeit larger CAF always had multiple fighter types.
For example, in1980, the CAF operated roughly 90 CF-104 Starfighters, 60 CF-101 Voodoos, and 70 CF-5 Freedom Fighters, for a total of about 220 front-line combat aircraft. If Carney can increase the RCAF buy to 150 aircraft, I’d say we can go with F-35s and Gripens. That said, if we’re staying with 80 odd aircraft, then a single type makes the only sense.
 
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Are we looking at making Gripens for other countries?


I think we’re likely stuck with the F-35 buy, as Trump would go bananas. Otherwise, if we expand the RCAF we could operate two fighter types. Until we went all in on the Hornets, the albeit larger CAF always had multiple fighter types.
For example, in1980, the CAF operated roughly 90 CF-104 Starfighters, 60 CF-101 Voodoos, and 70 CF-5 Freedom Fighters, for a total of about 220 front-line combat aircraft. If Carney can increase the RCAF buy to 150 aircraft, I’d say we can go with F-35s and Gripens. That said, if we’re staying with 80 odd aircraft, then a single type makes the only sense.

Maybe there is an argument for having cheaper to operate Gripens for more routine missions as F35 is very costly per flight hour--$30-$40k USD for F35 (per US air force) vs about $8k per flight hour for Gripen as per Saab. Particularly if Canada is looking to bulk up its air force beyond the committed F35s. Would Gripen be more suited to domestic defense (particularly far north) vs F35 for supporting NATO commitments in Europe and the like?
 
Maybe there is an argument for having cheaper to operate Gripens for more routine missions as F35 is very costly per flight hour--$30-$40k USD for F35 (per US air force) vs about $8k per flight hour for Gripen as per Saab. Particularly if Canada is looking to bulk up its air force beyond the committed F35s. Would Gripen be more suited to domestic defense (particularly far north) vs F35 for supporting NATO commitments in Europe and the like?
For me the argument for the Gripen is that the F-35 will itself be obsolete in the 2040s when drones rule the skies over any battlefield, so we might as well get the cheaper, yet still advanced option. Inversely, the RCAF’s more common role has been countering Russian incursions over NORAD and turning over dirt over some desert-dwelling despot, both of which operate kit that the cheaper Gripen is okay to face.

At the end of the day, if the SAAB Gripen is good enough for NATO members Sweden, Hungary, Czech Rep and now possibly Portugal, along with operators in the Americas (Brazil and now Columbia) it should be good enough for Canada.
 
Are we looking at making Gripens for other countries?

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saab-sweden-canada-jets-9.6959085

Nah. This is a Saab marketing pitch and political play. Their fighter is out of contention and their radar bird won't meet upcoming requirements either. Hence this pitch.

Until we went all in on the Hornets, the albeit larger CAF always had multiple fighter types.

Different time period. Different threat environnement, reaction time, missions, etc. À lot of what light fighters used to then are done by drones today.

Maybe there is an argument for having cheaper to operate Gripens for more routine missions as F35 is very costly per flight hour--$30-$40k USD for F35 (per US air force) vs about $8k per flight hour for Gripen as per Saab.

It's marketing nonsense. I have to regularly explain this. The F-35 comes with a lot more built in. Hence the higher costs. But to operate even a higher fraction of that ability requires Gripens to be supported by other expensive EW aircraft, carry targeting pods themselves and maybe use longer range munitions (more expensive). What matters is the system cost to deliver the necessary effect. Not the cost of individual pieces. And on this score, the F-35 is cheaper.

Put it this way. You have to change a light fixture. You need a certain number of tools. You can get that in a $30 multitool. Or you can buy $60 worth of tool where the screwdriver costs $10. What's the cheapest option for you to get the job done?
 
It makes no difference anyway, if Carney announced the cancelation or reduction of the F-35 deal, Trump would unleash a tantrum against Canada. I wouldn't be surprised if he demanded that all F-35 components and investment in Canada be repatriated, and heck in a fit of rage could demand that GDLS-C move all production back home.

But I strongly suggest that we consider non-US sources (when available and up to the task) for future military procurement. For example, when we decide to scrap the garbage Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclones, we should look to AgustaWestland for their Merlins, like we should have done in the first place.
 
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