The Jerusalem Post

Trudeau snubs Boeing, unveils plan to buy used Australian jets

- • By JOSH WINGROVE and GREG QUINN

OTTAWA – The Trudeau government is escalating a trade fight with Boeing Co., ditching plans to buy 18 Super Hornets while launching a search for new fighter jets under parameters that could hamper future bids from the US plane maker.

Canada said Tuesday it would instead pursue plans to buy 18 used Australian F-18 fighter jets to supplement its aging fleet, and launched the process to buy 88 new jets as a long-term replacemen­t. Officials didn’t specify a purchase price or maintenanc­e cost for the Australian jets. The purchase needs approval from the US government.

It’s the latest developmen­t in a dispute between the US and Canada as Boeing pursues a trade challenge against Montreal-based Bombardier Inc. – and comes with a potential new wrinkle for the US company. Canada created a new procuremen­t step, saying companies that hurt the country’s economy would be hard pressed to win any contracts, including the lucrative 88-jet order.

“Bidders responsibl­e for harming Canada’s economic interests will be at a distinct disadvanta­ge,” Procuremen­t Minister Carla Qualtrough said at a press conference. “The assessment criteria will be used in future procuremen­ts.”

Chicago-based Boeing launched a challenge against Bombardier over commercial planes. President Donald Trump has so far rejected calls to intervene from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who ruled out buying new F-18 Super Hornets in September unless Boeing dropped its challenge. British Prime Minister Theresa May has also lobbied Trump on the issue, defending Bombardier jobs in Belfast.

The prime minister campaigned in 2015 on not buying Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35 fighters due to the cost. Canada will now instead move to buy used jets, something its defense minister ruled out just 10 months ago. The Australian planes are of similar design and vintage to Canada’s aging CF-18s, and Canada expects the first supplement­al planes to be ready for service in the early 2020s.

“Looks like Canada is between a rock and a hard place,” said George Ferguson, senior aerospace defense analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “They canned the joint strike fighter because it was too expensive,” he said, referring to the F-35. “Now they are going for used rather than new F-18s. Seems like they will need to keep buying used until the memory of this fades.”

Canada said it would engage with stakeholde­rs through 2018 and 2019 as it considers its permanent replacemen­t fleet, holding a fighter plane industry day next month to provide manufactur­ers with informatio­n. It expects to award a contract in 2022 and forecasts delivery of its first permanent replacemen­t plane in 2025.

Boeing “respects the Canadian government’s decision,” Scott Day, a spokesman, said by email, adding the company will “continue to support all efforts to build an environmen­t of free and fair competitio­n marked by compliance with agreed upon rules.”

Ferguson doesn’t expect the US plane maker to drop its Bombardier challenge to appease Canada. “Boeing is not going to back down,” he said.

Bombardier Spokesman Simon Letendre said in an email the government’s decision “should come as no surprise given Boeing’s unprincipl­ed opportunis­tic attack on the Canadian aerospace industry.”

The cost of the planned air force equipment purchases including the fighter jet replacemen­t has been estimated at $20.5 billion over 20 years.

The jet purchase comes in a politicall­y charged environmen­t. Canada and the US are sparring over aerospace and softwood lumber, while also renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement. That list now includes approval of the Australian sale.

Transfers to a third party of military equipment originally provided via foreign military sales require US authorizat­ion, a US State Department official said, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of Tuesday’s announceme­nt. The official didn’t indicate whether Canada’s purchase would be approved.

The State Department reviews and approves all proposed transfers of US military equipment, and doesn’t comment on the status of pending sales or transfers until it has completed all necessary consultati­ons, according to a spokespers­on for the US Embassy in Ottawa.

Canada will consider the F-35 as its permanent replacemen­t, Qualtrough told CTV in November. Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan said in February he “will not be buying used aircraft for our air force,” a pledge jettisoned by Tuesday’s announceme­nt.

Ferguson said Canada could buy Dassault Aviation SA’s Rafale or the Eurofighte­r Typhoon – produced by a consortium including BAE Systems Plc, Airbus Group SE and Leonardo SpA – but they would cost as much as F-18s, and would lack commonalit­y with US forces and with the current fleet. “Then I bet they are back for F-18s or F-35s if they’re more concerned with future air combat capabiliti­es,” he said.

The F-35 will be adopted by the US and its allies at an accelerati­ng rate in the coming years, and commonalit­y is key, according to Douglas Rothacker, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. If Canada’s decision to buy the Australian jets eliminates Boeing’s F-18 as an option for the country’s long-term fighter solution, that’s “positive for Lockheed’s F-35 potential in Canada,” said Rothacker, adding Canada is a key manufactur­ing partner and its tentative 65 F-35 orders are still considered within the program of record.

– Bloomberg News/TNS

 ?? (Chris Wattie/Reuters) ?? CANADA’S PRIME MINISTER Justin Trudeau speaks during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday.
(Chris Wattie/Reuters) CANADA’S PRIME MINISTER Justin Trudeau speaks during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel