"The capability assessment here says that there is a clear-cut winner, no contest, no ambiguity,” says the Global Affairs Institute receiving sponsorship support from defence contractors, including Lockheed Martin and Saab.
Mission performance in fighter aircraft refers to the integrated ability to execute a complete flight profile (takeoff, climb, cruise, loiter, combat, return) successfully, defined by factors like range, payload (weapons/fuel), speed, maneuverability, and survivability, rather than just a single flight aspect. It answers: "Can the aircraft reach the target, deliver its payload, survive, and return safely and effectively?"
Ungradeability in fighter aircraft refers to the design capacity of an aircraft to incorporate new technologies—such as enhanced radar, weapons, avionics, and software—throughout its service life, allowing it to remain relevant against evolving threats without requiring a complete redesign. This process is often driven by "continuous modernization," which enables older airframes to be updated with modern capabilities, extending their operational life and improving performance, reliability, and lethality.
Saab reiterates Gripen E entirely upgradeable in the context of Canada's territory and Arctic environment.
Sustainment is the comprehensive system of logistics, personnel, and support services (like maintenance, supply, fuel, and health services) that ensures aircraft remain mission-capable, operational for extended durations, and ready for deployment, effectively keeping the fighting force fueled and functioning for prolonged combat operations. It's about maximizing readiness, minimizing downtime, and providing everything needed for the aircraft and aircrew to operate effectively from initial deployment through mission completion.
Been said repeatedly the F-35 down time abominable. Constantly requires maintenance in a hanger. Cost over runs not just in the field but procurement of parts in a scattered supply chain.
Technical criteria are the measurable, engineering, and performance-based requirements used to design, evaluate, and select military aircraft. These criteria ensure the aircraft meets specific operational demands for air-to-air combat, survivability, and mission effectiveness.
Capability delivery refers to the comprehensive process of providing operational, combat-ready warfighting effects to commanders, moving beyond simply purchasing physical aircraft. It encompasses the entire lifecycle—acquisition, integration, sustainment, and upgrading of sensors, weapons, and software—to ensure the aircraft can meet specific mission requirements in contested environments.
Overall, Lockheed Martin is promising benefits of more than $15 billion over the life of the contract, noting there is approximately $3 million in Canadian content in each of the 3,600 jets that will be delivered to various militaries.
Canada's three million dollars in each of 3600 aircraft looks more like $10 billion not $15 billion.
There is already equipment manufactured in Canada on more than 1,000 delivered jets. But the firm recently warned that the economic benefits of the F-35 purchase will "shrink" if Canada reduces its order.
Canada invested cash at the outset and can continue to bid on F-35 contracts if other nations keep buying regardless of Canada's decision to fly F-35s.
“It’s not up to the minister of industry to define Canada’s military needs". “Defence policy isn’t about jobs.”
Defence policy certainly about where Canada wants to go politically. Canada participated in America's military adventures in Afghanistan, Libya, and former Yugoslavia for naught and witnessed America's complacency in the destruction of Gaza. Defence policy about protecting Canada and Canadian's livelihoods, careers, prestige, sovereignty, culture and anything else Canadians value.
The F-35 got a score of 95 per cent on military capabilities, with a total of 57.1 points out of 60.
The F-35 topped scores where Canada doesn't need stealth to participate and penetrate some other nation's territory.
Saab GlobalEye surveillance aircraft
Carney government seeks to diversify Canada's source of military equipment and strengthen the industrial sector battered by tariffs.
Battered after following America into military adventurism.
Canadian Armed Forces would need to buy 72 Gripen fighter jets and six GlobalEye surveillance aircraft for Swedish manufacturer Saab to deliver on its pledge of creating 12,600 jobs in Canada, CBC News has learned.
"Saab remains ready to support the government of Canada with sovereign, cutting-edge solutions for the Canadian Armed Forces that will grow domestic industry," said Simon Carroll, president of Saab Canada.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/saab-canada-gripen-globaleye-f35-9.7043896
Simply, the Capability Manditory requirements in the table above belong to America's past adventures.