Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) News and Discussions

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
Surely Typhoon or Rafale would be a better option than Gripen if the RCAF wanted a non US Alternative to the F-35.

Both probably have less ITAR parts on them as well.
Both are much more expensive. Quebec would welcome the Rafale though.
 

StingrayOZ

Super Moderator
Staff member
Both are much more expensive. Quebec would welcome the Rafale though.
Is the effort to save money or gain independance from the US or build actual capability.

Always kind of confused how Canada sees the world. There is a peer war in Europe where 100,000+ have died and states are fighting for their existential existence and global stockpiles of 155mm artillery and barrels are depleted and pretty much the entire Soviet stockpile is gone. There is a war in the Middle East which has depleted a significant portion of the entire US strike stockpile. The now almost inevitable high pressure potential biggest global conflict ever with the American-Sino conflict. But also erratic leadership from the US with semi genuine concerns about them invading Denmark and Canada, or becoming totally insular, or perhaps imploding into their own civil issues.

And the move is to spend a little less, and get something a bit further into the future? Maybe with a bit more workshare?

Even historically peaceful, low spend states like New Zealand, Japan, Germany, etc are not just increasing budgets, they are trying to buy and build as much as they possibly can in the time left. Non aligned states are literally buying as much hardware that comes onto the market as they possibly can. People are talking about shipyards and factories going 24/7/365 in a full war like mobilisation.

The future conflicts aren't some magically far away in time potential. They are here and now. They have already started. If Canada is thinking about another aircraft, it should probably to assist delivery schedules.

Honestly, maybe Canada should acquire more Hornet airframes to keep their numbers up at least in mass until more deliveries arrive, and training and conversion can happen. US is disposing of their last Hornets, these could be acquired.
 

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
Is the effort to save money or gain independance from the US or build actual capability.
It is the result of being totally pissed off with Trump. No money would be saved. Independence and actual build capability came into focus with the the questionable delivery capacity as a result of the Iran and Ukrainian wars. Neither have any quick solutions.

Always kind of confused how Canada sees the world. There is a peer war in Europe where 100,000+ have died and states are fighting for their existential existence and global stockpiles of 155mm artillery and barrels are depleted and pretty much the entire Soviet stockpile is gone.
Junior and the idiots that supported him for ten years defines the confusion. Whether Carney can sort this remains to be seen

There is a war in the Middle East which has depleted a significant portion of the entire US strike stockpile. The now almost inevitable high pressure potential biggest global conflict ever with the American-Sino conflict. But also erratic leadership from the US with semi genuine concerns about them invading Denmark and Canada, or becoming totally insular, or perhaps imploding into their own civil issues.
All these issues seem to be on the government's radar...finally!! Again, we are stilling waiting for action.

And the move is to spend a little less, and get something a bit further into the future? Maybe with a bit more workshare?
The spend a little less plan and order later is now DOA. Workshare, still desired and that is not unreasonable.

Honestly, maybe Canada should acquire more Hornet airframes to keep their numbers up at least in mass until more deliveries arrive, and training and conversion can happen. US is disposing of their last Hornets, these could be acquired.
USN and USMC Hornets....why would we waste money on them, pretty much worn out? We need to decide NOW on new fast jets and in the meantime spend lots of coin on drones and anti-drone defence in conjunction with new army kit to deter our biggest threat.
 

StingrayOZ

Super Moderator
Staff member
USN and USMC Hornets....why would we waste money on them, pretty much worn out? We need to decide NOW on new fast jets and in the meantime spend lots of coin on drones and anti-drone defence in conjunction with new army kit to deter our biggest threat.
Well they would likely be cheap/give aways. Its dumb, but it is also dumb to be in the situation Canada is with its airforce.

What would Canada likely do if they were told with 100% confidence that China and the US are going to have a high intensity conflict in 2028 and the USAF may loose up to half its air force. That everyone, China, US, and everyone else, is currently acting like this going to happen. The end result of this may include Russia being a client state of China and China basing long range J20, drones and bombers in northern Russia (either under Chinese or Russian command). The US side, no longer a functioning democratic state. Both sides focus on building up huge numbers of full autonomous drones who do not respect airspaces. Global productivity drops as both sides launch huge constant cyber and physical attacks.

What capabilities apart from limited F-35 deliveries is Canada able to bring operational by late 2028? Because if you don't have it by early 2028, it doesn't exist and will may never exist. You still have to make plans for the future, but know major conflict is coming, and that any plans made for deliveries post 2028 have extremely high risk.

The idea that Canada can start to transition its defence arms race to start in 2028 is 10+ years too late.


Germany, known for its slow acquisitions, is moving very fast on its drone production program with deployable capability to be deployed by 2029, on a platform it hasn't even selected yet, that itself isn't FOC. Germany herself, operates 141 Eurofighters, 80 Tornados and F-35s (ordered with similar delivery dates to Canada). Germany sits in the middle of Europe.

Even then, the drones are designed to operate with Combat aircraft.
 

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
Well they would likely be cheap/give aways. Its dumb, but it is also dumb to be in the situation Canada is with its airforce.
Agree

What would Canada likely do if they were told with 100% confidence that China and the US are going to have a high intensity conflict in 2028 and the USAF may loose up to half its air force. That everyone, China, US, and everyone else, is currently acting like this going to happen. The end result of this may include Russia being a client state of China and China basing long range J20, drones and bombers in northern Russia (either under Chinese or Russian command). The US side, no longer a functioning democratic state. Both sides focus on building up huge numbers of full autonomous drones who do not respect airspaces. Global productivity drops as both sides launch huge constant cyber and physical attacks.
If a high intensity war between the US and China breaks out in 2028, it will go nuclear and what Canada could do is meaningless.
 

StingrayOZ

Super Moderator
Staff member
If a high intensity war between the US and China breaks out in 2028, it will go nuclear and what Canada could do is meaningless.
Extremely Unlikely. This isn't a 1960's cold war stand off. But its interesting you say that, maybe that feeds into Canada's position. That if the US is defeated/stalemated then from the Canadian point of view, there is no point in trying. Canada needs to ask more questions of itself, including what if the US is defeated, or if the US abandons them.

China has a different policy with nuclear weapons, they aren't are major part of why it is a threat. The truly game changing thing from before, is China doesn't need nuclear weapons to win against America. China makes more ships, more planes, more missiles, more technology than the US. China's economy is as big as the US. The US China relationship is very, very different from the US-Soviet Russia one.

China doesn't really want to wipe the US off the map, they would make excellent consumers for Chinese goods, it wants the US wealth, and it wants to get it by simply beating the Americans at their own capitalistic game and make them secondary to them. The US isn't some ideological devil that can't exist, it is what they intend to replicate and turn themselves into. America needs to remain materially intact enough to prove that China is better. At least in my opinion, analysing and reducing complex nation states and their aims is difficult and not my forte.

But if Canada thinks the US is erratic and chaotic now, then looking into a future where China wins a conventional war, but with heavy losses on both sides, one that China quickly rebuilds and the US can't. China takes Taiwan, pushes Japan back, pushes the US Navy to Hawaii, neutralises Guam, controls global shipping. US becomes 2nd largest economy in all metrics. I would think the US would have its own internal crisis when that happens, it will become very chaotic and nationalistic, and may want to pick fights it can win.

Or US China competition just becomes extremely high stake as the two nations cold war try to out innovate each other in a brutal way, that involve various minor hot wars. Testing each others barriers and borders and defences.

One of the key things will be Canada in that situation.

China circumnavigated Australia in a rather limp attempt at perhaps intimidation (but still with a very capable cruiser, disrupting air travel, probing defences). I could easily see China deploying a more substantial force to push freedom of navigation through northern Canada, flying through Canadian airspace etc.

In that case US fighters could be shooting down Chinese drones over Canadian cities/urban areas on a regular basis.

In that case having an operational fleet of 100-200 older F-18 would be more useful, than a dozen F-35s. Canada would need to be able to fly continuous air patrol missions more like other countries like Japan, Korea etc. The Canadian air force would have to have much more mass. More squadrons based remotely etc. Many countries have large fleets of older planes like F-5/old block F-16, etc for just this mission. Taking on aircraft of a type already in operation with the air force would be much quicker and doable than trying to get deliveries of a new aircraft to bring in 50+< 3-4 years.

Canada could conscript/incentive former F-18 pilots/maintainers into service. Draw ex-US service men and women over. Protecting Canada may make more sense to them than being conscripted into a high intensity attrition war with China over Taiwan.

The F-18's I am talking about are now currently used as home guard units for the US. The aircraft would then perform a similar mission for Canada, not be deployed to Europe or Asia, but fighting over Canadian territory has Canada experiences a Ukraine style air threat.
 

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
China has a different policy with nuclear weapons, they aren't are major part of why it is a threat. The truly game changing thing from before, is China doesn't need nuclear weapons to win against America. China makes more ships, more planes, more missiles, more technology than the US. China's economy is as big as the US. The US China relationship is very, very different from the US-Soviet Russia one.
I agree that China probably does not need nukes to win against the US. Their industrial capacity will be sufficient even after the US expends their all their strike weapons. The US could resort to them if they were losing badly enough.

China doesn't really want to wipe the US off the map, they would make excellent consumers for Chinese goods, it wants the US wealth, and it wants to get it by simply beating the Americans at their own capitalistic game and make them secondary to them. The US isn't some ideological devil that can't exist, it is what they intend to replicate and turn themselves into. America needs to remain materially intact enough to prove that China is better. At least in my opinion, analysing and reducing complex nation states and their aims is difficult and not my forte.
The above could work if there is no serious shooting war. A war would diminish American wealth but more importantly, American consumers won't buy Chinese goods after having their a$$es kicked.

But if Canada thinks the US is erratic and chaotic now, then looking into a future where China wins a conventional war, but with heavy losses on both sides, one that China quickly rebuilds and the US can't. China takes Taiwan, pushes Japan back, pushes the US Navy to Hawaii, neutralises Guam, controls global shipping. US becomes 2nd largest economy in all metrics. I would think the US would have its own internal crisis when that happens, it will become very chaotic and nationalistic, and may want to pick fights it can win.
All the above is possible except for the US becoming the 2nd largest economy. Losing a war and the likely civil strife that follows doesn't sound like a 2nd place finish to me.

Or US China competition just becomes extremely high stake as the two nations cold war try to out innovate each other in a brutal way, that involve various minor hot wars. Testing each others barriers and borders and defences.
The US won the the first cold war because of industrial capacity, wealth, and technology along with some help from allies. The US position today wrt those parameters aren't as overwhelming. Not sure when China's demographic problem kicks in but not likely before the US bankrupts itself.



I could easily see China deploying a more substantial force to push freedom of navigation through northern Canada, flying through Canadian airspace etc.
In that case US fighters could be shooting down Chinese drones over Canadian cities/urban areas on a regular basis.
I don't know the range of any naval Chinese drone that could be fired from our Northern waters but the distances to Canadian cities is immense and even more to American ones. PLAN assets up there would have to deal with land based defences, USN SSNs (maybe our new subs if stuff happens in the next decade), and $hit weather. Again, timing is important. Canada has MQ-9B and P-8s on order to further complicate any PLAN activity in the Arctic.

Probably should end it here and move further comment to the Canada defence thread.
 

Terran

Well-Known Member
That’s a bit of spin there John. As the article points out these rates fluctuate and the Navy and Marine fleets were doing better this than they had 5 years ago. There are a number of known issues here on why they slumped. Issues that are likely to be resolved by the time of a full CF35 delivery. Additionally this doesn’t resolve any of the issues that we have pointed out for the proposed Grippen.
 

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
The readiness goal for 2030 is 65%. Currently 16 jets on order and long-term items for an addition (14?) have funding so if the additional 14 or whatever are fully committed to this year, would these all arrive by 2029-30? If the readiness goal isn't reached in 2030 or worsens then what? LM's resolutions to problem issues isn't exactly stellar. I can imagine the increased political pressure against increasing the fleet past 40 jets in 2030 if readiness goals to continue to disappoint. Of course if the world goes to $hit in 2027-28 as some predict, none of this with matter.
 

Terran

Well-Known Member
F35 is still going through info structure build out and this article is on the American F35 not a Canadian buy.
Farther F35 infrastructure exists to build up as opposed to Grippen which is only theoretical.
That political pressure to curtail a Canadian buy of more F35 because of American readiness is more likely to result in the Royal Canadian Air Force reverting to crop dusters than any sort of fast fixed wing.
 
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