Kosovo at the start. I know Hornet drivers who had missiles fired their way.
This is a common Canadian viewpoint. And it frustrates the crap out of those of us in uniform. Do people not realized that the Nigeria or Libya's of 2050 will have equipment that is considered sophisticated today? We are not buying for today. We are buying to have an aircraft that will still have a shot at bringing the pilot home in 2040-2050.
Terrible choice? No. I like the Typhoon. But even the Europeans are realizing that stealth is where much not an option going forward. The Typhoon would have been the perfect choice. If we bought it a decade ago.
I don't understand why people don't get this. The public has seen how much smartphones have improved in a decade. Yet, they don't seem to get that similar (or even further) advances are being made in military technology. Radars are getting smaller and cheaper. IR cameras that you can buy commercially have better resolution that the sensors on most missiles we have. Image processing is getting so good that the missiles can tell which aircraft or ship it is and compute an impact point that will maximize damage. AI is getting to the point it can provide an element of leading guidance for missiles. And railguns are coming along so quickly that it's possible they'll make missiles obsoletes on ships in a decade (with first deployments in 5 years). And they have speeds that make missiles look like they're walking (2000 m/s muzzle velocity, Mach 6), with rounds that cost a fraction of what missiles do. And that's before we discuss energy weapons. All this means that we're reaching the point where you cannot employ superior kinematics to evade a threat. The only hope is to maximize every possible way to avoid detection and if detected to avoid a targeting lock. No amount of engines, or maneuverability will save you from a hypersonic projectile fired from a railgun that's been designed to take out an incoming maneuvering ICBM or from a laser.
I always wonder. Do people really think that those of us in the military are clueless and don't understand technology, our jobs and we need to do those jobs despite having a whole cadre of defence scientists, analysts and military officers with advanced science and engineering education? It's almost as if it never occurs to people that we are professionals who know our stuff and are providing advice for the nation's benefit.