Photos of Canada's new defence minister, Harjit Sajjan, a decorated lieutenant-colonel, are making the rounds on social media � and many refer to the former Vancouver police detective as a 'badass.'
We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
"Canadian_Mind" said We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
It's not really the Defence Minister's call, given the cost. My guess is that while we will see some procurement, there is not going to be any renaissance in military spending.
"Thanos" said The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened. Not so much for the Air Force.
OTTAWA � Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau fired a political broadside directly at one of his Conservative rival�s most vulnerable flanks Sunday as he promised to scrap the controversial big-ticket purchase of the F-35 fighter jet, sinking the proceeds instead into the Royal Canadian Navy � and shipyards in Halifax and Vancouver.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
"Canadian_Mind" said We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
Not just kit ... good kit. It seems that the acquisition process went way off the rails and became totally politicised. You wonder the Forces had any say in any of the big purchases.
"Freakinoldguy" said The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened. Not so much for the Air Force.
OTTAWA � Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau fired a political broadside directly at one of his Conservative rival�s most vulnerable flanks Sunday as he promised to scrap the controversial big-ticket purchase of the F-35 fighter jet, sinking the proceeds instead into the Royal Canadian Navy � and shipyards in Halifax and Vancouver.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
You've served on ancient ships. When we buy ships, they last pretty damned near to a half a century. The upfront costs are huge but the amortization is long, long. $ per year to maintain a barebones Navy is negligable for the 12th largest economy on the planet.
"Freakinoldguy" said The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened. Not so much for the Air Force.
OTTAWA � Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau fired a political broadside directly at one of his Conservative rival�s most vulnerable flanks Sunday as he promised to scrap the controversial big-ticket purchase of the F-35 fighter jet, sinking the proceeds instead into the Royal Canadian Navy � and shipyards in Halifax and Vancouver.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
Chretien was JT's mentor??? Are you sure about that???
"BeaverFever" said We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
It's not really the Defence Minister's call, given the cost. My guess is that while we will see some procurement, there is not going to be any renaissance in military spending.
While the decision to spend money isn't his, he can look at needs and offer his advice on what is desperately needed and in what order.
I'm hoping they can get started on the Single Class Combatant right away and rebuild our DDHs as well as buy Super Hornets or some other twin engine fighter for the air force.
"Jabberwalker" said The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened. Not so much for the Air Force.
OTTAWA � Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau fired a political broadside directly at one of his Conservative rival�s most vulnerable flanks Sunday as he promised to scrap the controversial big-ticket purchase of the F-35 fighter jet, sinking the proceeds instead into the Royal Canadian Navy � and shipyards in Halifax and Vancouver.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
You've served on ancient ships. When we buy ships, they last pretty damned near to a half a century. The upfront costs are huge but the amortization is long, long. $ per year to maintain a barebones Navy is negligable for the 12th largest economy on the planet.
And our planes last? We need both, maybe not the F35 but still new planes of some type. FFS the Air Force used T33's till 2005.
So the reality is that the problem isn't with the platforms or the Services it's with the successive gov'ts who since the middle 60's have underfunded, ignored or stripped the military of it's resources, people and soul.
Although, I'm pretty sure that when Justin decides to look seriously at pulling out of the F35 Program and weighs it against the 145 Billion worth of promises he made on the campaign trail, he's going to do what Gov'ts have done since before his dad took office and that's, to take the money promised for new ships, and planes then plow it right into worthy programs like the "Court Challenges Program" where "we" the taxpayers fund groups to sue "we" the Gov't.
"BeaverFever" said The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened. Not so much for the Air Force.
OTTAWA � Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau fired a political broadside directly at one of his Conservative rival�s most vulnerable flanks Sunday as he promised to scrap the controversial big-ticket purchase of the F-35 fighter jet, sinking the proceeds instead into the Royal Canadian Navy � and shipyards in Halifax and Vancouver.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
Chretien was JT's mentor??? Are you sure about that???
Nope but what other reason would there be for trotting out an old despised PM with a jaded past.
If you�re Justin Trudeau, apparently, you trot out greying veterans of the party�s old guard, adopt many of the policies that dominated their years, and align yourself with a provincial regime that has been in power 13 baggage-filled years.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys
That's what being a Liberal us supposed to be about - when presented with the facts they ARE CAPABLE of changing their mind. You know, as opposed to circling the wagons and never, ever reconsidering no matter what (because changing your mind is wishy-washy)
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
It's not really the Defence Minister's call, given the cost. My guess is that while we will see some procurement, there is not going to be any renaissance in military spending.
The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
Not just kit ... good kit. It seems that the acquisition process went way off the rails and became totally politicised. You wonder the Forces had any say in any of the big purchases.
The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
You've served on ancient ships. When we buy ships, they last pretty damned near to a half a century. The upfront costs are huge but the amortization is long, long. $ per year to maintain a barebones Navy is negligable for the 12th largest economy on the planet.
The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
Chretien was JT's mentor??? Are you sure about that???
his mentor Jean Chretien
JC wac JTs mentor?
We'll see if he has the willingness to maintain or even increase the number of ships on order, increase the size of Canada's reg force to a full heavy mechanised division, and actually get the fighter procurement program in order... Never mind things like new anti-sub/naval aircraft, new rescue planes, new subs, etc.
Effectively, the prodigal son has to sign off on even more kit for the CF than his dad did in the 80s. As much as we like to rip into Trudeau Sr. over his military portfolio, he is responsible for many of the procurement programs that lead to the kit we have today. I hope his son is able to follow suite in that regard without implementing similar troop cuts.
It's not really the Defence Minister's call, given the cost. My guess is that while we will see some procurement, there is not going to be any renaissance in military spending.
While the decision to spend money isn't his, he can look at needs and offer his advice on what is desperately needed and in what order.
I'm hoping they can get started on the Single Class Combatant right away and rebuild our DDHs as well as buy Super Hornets or some other twin engine fighter for the air force.
The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
You've served on ancient ships. When we buy ships, they last pretty damned near to a half a century. The upfront costs are huge but the amortization is long, long. $ per year to maintain a barebones Navy is negligable for the 12th largest economy on the planet.
And our planes last? We need both, maybe not the F35 but still new planes of some type. FFS the Air Force used T33's till 2005.
So the reality is that the problem isn't with the platforms or the Services it's with the successive gov'ts who since the middle 60's have underfunded, ignored or stripped the military of it's resources, people and soul.
Although, I'm pretty sure that when Justin decides to look seriously at pulling out of the F35 Program and weighs it against the 145 Billion worth of promises he made on the campaign trail, he's going to do what Gov'ts have done since before his dad took office and that's, to take the money promised for new ships, and planes then plow it right into worthy programs like the "Court Challenges Program" where "we" the taxpayers fund groups to sue "we" the Gov't.
The day that they give Canada's participation in the F-35 program the heave-ho will be a great day for the entire country.
It'd be a great day for the Navy if that happened.
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys. Secondly, plowing the saved money into the Navy would start the biggest battle between the Services we've seen since his other mentor Paul Hellyer decided to amalgamate the 3 into a giant mass of green confusion.
The Navy not withstanding, the only way he gets away with sinking the program is if he has another fighter lined up to take the J35's place which, given military procurement isn't likely to happen in his lifetime.
Chretien was JT's mentor??? Are you sure about that???
Nope but what other reason would there be for trotting out an old despised PM with a jaded past.
http://news.nationalpost.com/full-comme ... and-martin
Call me cynical but I have my doubts we'll see either of those things happen. First off, the J35 Program was a Liberal baby conceived by his mentor Jean Chretien so, sinking it would be a slap in the face of the party and specifically the backroom boys
That's what being a Liberal us supposed to be about - when presented with the facts they ARE CAPABLE of changing their mind. You know, as opposed to circling the wagons and never, ever reconsidering no matter what (because changing your mind is wishy-washy)
Can't wait to see the awesome military he'll predictably plan to build that will never get built.