National Post (National Edition)

U.S. gives OK to Canada's purchase of fighter jets

- DaviD Pugliese dpugliese@postmedia.com Twitter.com/davidpugli­ese

The U.S. government has approved Canada’s purchase of used F-18 fighter jets from Australia, paving the way for the deal to be completed by the end of the year.

The sign-off from the Americans was needed because the aircraft were built in the U.S. with U.S. technology.

Dan Le Bouthillie­r of the Department of National Defence said Friday negotiatio­ns with Australia over the sale of the 25 used fighter jets is ongoing.

“Should all negotiatio­ns and approvals move forward as planned, aircraft would start arriving in Canada in 2019, and the project remains on track to achieve this milestone,” he said. “The delivery plan, including mode of delivery, will be finalized once negotiatio­ns are complete and the aircraft being purchased are selected.”

In June, Postmedia reported Canada had boosted the number of used Australian fighter jets it is purchasing to 25 from 18 but that the deal still hinged on approval from the U.S. government.

Although U.S.-Canada relations have hit a slump, with President Donald Trump vowing to punish Canadians because of ongoing trade disputes, DND officials hope the situation won’t affect approvals for the fighter jet sale to proceed.

The Liberal government originally announced it would buy 18 used Australian F-18 jets to augment the Royal Canadian Air Force’s CF-18s until new aircraft can be purchased in the coming years. But it has added seven more used Australian F-18 aircraft to the deal.

Those extra aircraft will be stripped down for parts or used for testing.

The exact cost of purchasing the 25 aircraft, along with weapons and other equipment, is not yet known, Procuremen­t Minister Carla Qualtrough pointed out earlier this year. The Liberal government has set aside up to $500 million for the project.

Earlier this year, Pat Finn, the Department of National Defence’s assistant deputy minister of materiel, said the government has received what’s called a letter of cost proposal on the impending sale. “The Australian­s have now gone to the U.S. State Department for the transfer under ITAR,” Finn explained to MPs on the Commons defence committee at the time.

Finn indicated the DND wants to have the deal in place by the end of this year. “The idea of firming this up in the fall of 2018 was for the start of delivery of the two first aircraft to be next summer, and then quickly beyond it,” he added.

The federal government has confirmed the Australian aircraft will be operating alongside the RCAF’s other CF-18s at Bagotville, Que., and Cold Lake. “The aircraft will be employed at 3 Wing Bagotville and 4 Wing Cold Lake,” a government official noted. “DND is currently reviewing infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts to accommodat­e the additional aircraft. Any modificati­ons are expected to be minimal.” clair feels the weight of his family’s history when he has no choice but to go to an emergency room in Winnipeg.

He feels anxious, uncertain and sometimes angry.

A few years ago, he had a serious accident with a chainsaw in the woods and was taken to Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre. He figures his name must be known at the hospital because the care came immediatel­y.

“I hit that little button, it’s like they were standing at the door or something,” he said. “They probably didn’t want another Sinclair dying in their hospital.”

It was a Friday afternoon 10 years ago when Robert’s cousin, Brian Sinclair, visited the same emergency room.

The 45-year-old had been in a wheelchair since he lost his legs to frostbite in 2007. After a visit to his community clinic that Friday, he was

THIS IS IN NO WAY AN ISSUE THAT HAS GONE AWAY.

ered, rigor mortis had already set in.

“It’s terrible to remember that he actually died that way,” Robert Sinclair said. “I’d like to think that he passed away teaching us all something, teaching us that as human beings we have become so insensitiv­e to each other.”

An inquest into Brian Sinclair’s death, which began in 2013, concluded it was preventabl­e and made 63 recommenda­tions, largely system 10 years later.

“There are a number of people who have similar stories — what people have been calling ‘Brian Sinclair stories’ — where they have individual­s in their family or their community who also experience­d inadequate care,” said McCallum, a member of the Munsee Delaware Nation in Ontario.

In her new book, co-written with University of Manitoba history professor Adele Perry, called Structures of

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