The opposition parties are demanding that Defence Minister Peter MacKay resign over the skyrocketing cost of the F-35 fighter jet after Postmedia News revealed the troubled program had finally been axed.
Faced with the imminent release of a government-commissioned audit by accountants KPMG that will push the total projected life-cycle costs of the aircraft above $30-billion, the Harper Conservatives have decided to scrap the controversial sole-source program and go back to the drawing board, a source familiar with the decision said.
This occurred after Chief of the Defence Staff Thomas Lawson, while en route overseas, was called back urgently to appear before members of the cabinet, the source said.
The KPMG report is expected to show the price tag for owning and operating 65 stealth fighters could stretch to $40-billion. That’s far in excess of the $16-billion that the Conservatives insisted the multi-role, radar-evading jets would cost.
“The government has consistently misled Canada about the true cost of this aircraft … all of what the government said has been shown to be completely and totally untrue,” Liberal Leader Bob Rae said Friday.
Liberal MP John McKay says the defence minister should quit for previously insisting that the F-35 was the only plane the Canadian air force should buy.
New Democrat MP Jack Harris also called on the government to immediately release the KPMG report. The report has been in the hands of the government for a week.
Last spring, the Auditor-General pegged the F-35 program cost at $25-billion and blasted the Harper government for low-balling the purchase.
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan says the government will stick to its seven-point response to the Auditor-General’s report, and will issue a report to the House of Commons before it rises for the Christmas break.
The decision on the jet program was to go before the cabinet planning and priorities committee Friday morning but the outcome was not in doubt, the source said.
PMO spokesman Andrew MacDougall took to Twitter Thursday evening to deny a decision has been made. “The government will fulfill its seven-point plan,” he tweeted.
The government is “awaiting reports that will be tabled as part of the seven-point plan,” MacDougall said later in an email. “Government will need this information to make an informed decision.”
The cabinet meeting Friday morning was to have established a communications plan for unveiling the change of direction to Canadians, Postmedia’s source said.
The decision is sure to have ripple effects around the world, as any reduction in the number of aircraft on order causes the price to go up for all the other buyers. Canada is one of nine F-35 consortium members, including the United States.
The CF-18s currently flown by the RCAF are at the tail end of their life cycle and are not expected to be operable much beyond 2020 at the outside.
The fighter procurement process has been the responsibility of Public Works Minister Rona Ambrose since last spring, following an audit by Auditor-General Michael Ferguson. It is understood that veteran senior bureaucrat Tom Ring, who handled the government’s much-praised shipbuilding contract process in the fall of 2011, is now steering the reframed fighter replacement process, from within Public Works.
Last spring, Ferguson ignited a political firestorm when he reported that the top-line cost cited by the Conservatives in the 2011 election campaign — $9-billion for 65 planes, or $15-billion including maintenance and other life-cycle costs — was $10-billion below the Defence Department’s internal estimate.
Even the internal figure of $25.1-billion was suspect, critics said, because it assumed a 20-year life cycle. The longevity of the Lockheed-Martin-built aircraft, according to the Pentagon, is 36 years.
KPMG’s audit, due out next week, has confirmed the contention, long made by critics such as former assistant deputy minister (materiel) Alan Williams, that the F-35 program’s real cost would be much higher than any previously stated government estimate, sources say.
Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page predicted a cost of $30 billion over a 30-year life cycle.
Ambrose has been signalling since last spring that she was unhappy with the procurement process. On Nov. 22 in the House of Commons, she said the government is committed to “a full evaluation of all choices, not simply a refresh.”
Lawson, in an appearance before the House of Commons defence committee Nov. 29, further opened the door when he confirmed what industry critics have long said: The F-35 is not the only modern fighter with measures to evade radar, though it is considered to be the most advanced in this respect. “Is there only one airplane that can meet the standard of stealth that’s set out in the statement of requirements?” the Liberal’s John McKay asked.
Lawson’s answer: “No.”
The F-35’s unique stealthiness had long been advanced as the single most compelling argument for buying that plane.
Also in the mix, former industry minister David Emerson last week published a report on the aerospace and space sectors, calling on Ottawa to more aggressively press for Industrial and Regional Benefits (IRBs) and In-Service Support (ISS) contracts when inking procurement deals. Lockheed-Martin has in the past been reluctant to hand over its proprietary technology to clients. Industry insiders believe the Emerson report added impetus to the decision to start over.
Boeing’s Super Hornet, Dassault’s Rafale, Saab’s Gripen, the Eurofighter Typhoon , and the F-35, are seen as the leading contenders in any new contest to replace the CF-18 fleet.
Original Article
Source: national post
Author: National Post Staff
Faced with the imminent release of a government-commissioned audit by accountants KPMG that will push the total projected life-cycle costs of the aircraft above $30-billion, the Harper Conservatives have decided to scrap the controversial sole-source program and go back to the drawing board, a source familiar with the decision said.
This occurred after Chief of the Defence Staff Thomas Lawson, while en route overseas, was called back urgently to appear before members of the cabinet, the source said.
The KPMG report is expected to show the price tag for owning and operating 65 stealth fighters could stretch to $40-billion. That’s far in excess of the $16-billion that the Conservatives insisted the multi-role, radar-evading jets would cost.
“The government has consistently misled Canada about the true cost of this aircraft … all of what the government said has been shown to be completely and totally untrue,” Liberal Leader Bob Rae said Friday.
Liberal MP John McKay says the defence minister should quit for previously insisting that the F-35 was the only plane the Canadian air force should buy.
New Democrat MP Jack Harris also called on the government to immediately release the KPMG report. The report has been in the hands of the government for a week.
Last spring, the Auditor-General pegged the F-35 program cost at $25-billion and blasted the Harper government for low-balling the purchase.
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan says the government will stick to its seven-point response to the Auditor-General’s report, and will issue a report to the House of Commons before it rises for the Christmas break.
The decision on the jet program was to go before the cabinet planning and priorities committee Friday morning but the outcome was not in doubt, the source said.
PMO spokesman Andrew MacDougall took to Twitter Thursday evening to deny a decision has been made. “The government will fulfill its seven-point plan,” he tweeted.
The government is “awaiting reports that will be tabled as part of the seven-point plan,” MacDougall said later in an email. “Government will need this information to make an informed decision.”
The cabinet meeting Friday morning was to have established a communications plan for unveiling the change of direction to Canadians, Postmedia’s source said.
The decision is sure to have ripple effects around the world, as any reduction in the number of aircraft on order causes the price to go up for all the other buyers. Canada is one of nine F-35 consortium members, including the United States.
The CF-18s currently flown by the RCAF are at the tail end of their life cycle and are not expected to be operable much beyond 2020 at the outside.
The fighter procurement process has been the responsibility of Public Works Minister Rona Ambrose since last spring, following an audit by Auditor-General Michael Ferguson. It is understood that veteran senior bureaucrat Tom Ring, who handled the government’s much-praised shipbuilding contract process in the fall of 2011, is now steering the reframed fighter replacement process, from within Public Works.
Last spring, Ferguson ignited a political firestorm when he reported that the top-line cost cited by the Conservatives in the 2011 election campaign — $9-billion for 65 planes, or $15-billion including maintenance and other life-cycle costs — was $10-billion below the Defence Department’s internal estimate.
Even the internal figure of $25.1-billion was suspect, critics said, because it assumed a 20-year life cycle. The longevity of the Lockheed-Martin-built aircraft, according to the Pentagon, is 36 years.
KPMG’s audit, due out next week, has confirmed the contention, long made by critics such as former assistant deputy minister (materiel) Alan Williams, that the F-35 program’s real cost would be much higher than any previously stated government estimate, sources say.
Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page predicted a cost of $30 billion over a 30-year life cycle.
Ambrose has been signalling since last spring that she was unhappy with the procurement process. On Nov. 22 in the House of Commons, she said the government is committed to “a full evaluation of all choices, not simply a refresh.”
Lawson, in an appearance before the House of Commons defence committee Nov. 29, further opened the door when he confirmed what industry critics have long said: The F-35 is not the only modern fighter with measures to evade radar, though it is considered to be the most advanced in this respect. “Is there only one airplane that can meet the standard of stealth that’s set out in the statement of requirements?” the Liberal’s John McKay asked.
Lawson’s answer: “No.”
The F-35’s unique stealthiness had long been advanced as the single most compelling argument for buying that plane.
Also in the mix, former industry minister David Emerson last week published a report on the aerospace and space sectors, calling on Ottawa to more aggressively press for Industrial and Regional Benefits (IRBs) and In-Service Support (ISS) contracts when inking procurement deals. Lockheed-Martin has in the past been reluctant to hand over its proprietary technology to clients. Industry insiders believe the Emerson report added impetus to the decision to start over.
Boeing’s Super Hornet, Dassault’s Rafale, Saab’s Gripen, the Eurofighter Typhoon , and the F-35, are seen as the leading contenders in any new contest to replace the CF-18 fleet.
Original Article
Source: national post
Author: National Post Staff
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