Montreal Gazette

Mackay urged to quit amid fighter jet fallout

Government still quiet on decision

- LEE BERTHIAUME and JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The opposition called on Defence Minister Peter MacKay to resign Friday as the government began dealing with the political fallout from its reported decision to scrap its plan to sole-source the F-35 stealth fighter.

But that may only be the start.

National Defence and Public Works are conducting a complete rethink of what Canada’s next jet fighters will be required to do and assessing what options are available to get the job done — with stealth only one of several considerat­ions.

Yet the government has not said whether it will terminate involvemen­t in a 2006 agreement that establishe­d this country as a key F-35 partner and committed Canada to hundreds of millions of dollars in developmen­t costs.

The clock on that decision is ticking as Canada is due to contribute another tranche of money in May if it wants to stay in the internatio­nal program — though taxpayers will also be on the hook if the government decides to bail.

Conservati­ve cabinet ministers gathered in Ottawa on Friday wouldn’t respond to Postmedia reports the government has backtracke­d from its plan to sole-source the F-35 after an independen­t audit put the program’s costs at more than $30 billion, and perhaps above $40 billion.

The National Post puts the cost at $45.8 billion. That’s the number that will stand out when the Harper government releases KPMG’s report on the cost of the F-35 program early next week.

The National Post has seen sections of the report, including the cost estimates calculated by the accountanc­y firm charged with forecastin­g the entire 42-year life cycle cost of buying 65 new fighter jets.

KPMG says it will cost Canadian taxpayers nearly $46 billion to replace the fleet of 77 aging CF18s with the F-35s — nearly twice the numbers circulated by the Department of National Defence.

When MacKay did come out of the Commons, he wouldn’t say what the government has decided to do with the multibilli­on-dollar purchase. Nor did he respond to Liberal and NDP calls to step down.

“There’s been a lot of speculatio­n over the last 24 hours,” MacKay said. “What I can tell you is we’re following the seven-point plan as we have been now for some months, and into next week there’ll be an open and transparen­t discussion about the next steps that are going to follow in the CF18 replacemen­t.”

Some of those steps are already underway.

National Defence has gone back to the drawing board to figure out what missions Canada’s next fighters will be called on to do over the coming decades, what threats they will face and what capabiliti­es will help them succeed.

And Public Works is preparing to reach out to other fighter aircraft manufactur­ers, such as Boeing and Eurofighte­r, to assess the costs and capabiliti­es of their respect- ive jets as compared to Lockheed Martin’s F-35.

The Conservati­ve government has repeatedly stated that it will not deviate from its $9-billion budget for acquiring a replacemen­t aircraft for Canada’s CF-18s.

At the same time, however, Canada remains an internatio­nal partner in the F-35 stealth fighter program by virtue of its continued involvemen­t in a key memorandum of understand­ing signed by National Defence in 2006.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s spokesman Andrew MacDougall confirmed Canada remains involved in the agreement, which committed Canada to contributi­ng $551.6 million U.S. over the course of the program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada