Feds facing short runway on fighter jets amid new questions about schedule
OTTAWA — Canada’s tortured effort to buy new fighter jets is facing a fresh challenge as uncertainty about when the aircraft will arrive is making it hard for officials to know how long the military’s aging CF-18s must stay in the air.
The problem is no trivial matter as upgrading too many planes for too long could waste hundreds of millions — maybe even billions — of dollars while not upgrading enough could leave the military with a shortage.
Yet while time could provide some clarity, the clock on a decision is ticking as Canada’s head of military procurement, Patrick Finn, says work on the CF-18s must start soon to make sure they aren’t grounded.
“It’s tight,” said Finn, the Defence Department’s assistant deputy minister of materiel. “If you don’t have the lead time to do it, you start to have operational impacts.”


