Harper Government Accused Of Rigging F-35 Purchase

F35

First Posted: 03/27/2012 7:21 pm Updated: 03/29/2012 5:24 pm


Opposition MPs demanded answers from the government on the F-35 fighter jet purchase Tuesday following a CBC News story that raised questions about the process used to choose the aircraft and whether it meets the requirements stipulated by the military.


Evan Solomon, host of Power & Politics, reported Monday that CBC News had seen a copy of the department of national defence's statement of operational requirements, a document that has not been released publicly. It indicated that the mandatory requirements for the jet that would be chosen to replace the aging CF-18s was written in June 2010.


That is only one month before Defence Minister Peter MacKay announced that the government would buy 65 of Lockheed Martin's F-35 planes, through the Joint Strike Fighter program. It also revealed that at least one of the mandatory requirements given by national defence is not met by the F-35 model.


One of the 28 mandatory requirements listed is for the plane's sensor requirements. The document says the plane must be capable of providing the pilot with a helmet that allows 360-degree, out-of-cockpit visual situational awareness in a no-light environment.


"According to the U.S. Department of Defence there are so many problems with this feature that they're actually designing a backup. In other words, the plane can't do it," Solomon reported.


Associate Minister of Defence Julian Fantino fielded questions during question period about the CBC News story on the F-35s.


NDP MP Matthew Kellway said the government tabled a response to an order paper question on Monday, the same day the story aired, that said the F-35 currently meets all of the military's stated requirements.


"Which document is the truth? The one for public consumption or the one kept secret?" Kellway asked.


"We will remain committed to the Joint Strike Fighter program," Fantino responded. "A budget has been identified, a contract has not been signed for a replacement aircraft and we will make sure that the air force and the men and women there have the necessary tools to do their job and that's the bottom line."


Prime Minister Stephen Harper was also asked about the procurement during a press conference in South Korea where he is wrapping up a trip to Asia.


He said Canada has participated in the F-35 development program with its allies for 15 years and the aerospace industry has received "hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts" because of it.


"We haven't yet signed a contract, as you know, we retain that flexibility but we are committed to continuing our aerospace sector's participation in the development of the F-35," Harper said.


Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae said if the government is considering a model other than the F-35, it should be telling Canadians.


"There's obviously been a shift in position in the last several weeks," Rae said, referring to Fantino's change in messaging over the last few weeks. Fantino previously defended the F-35 vigorously but now says that a final contract to buy the planes hasn't been signed.


NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair said the documents seen by CBC News show that the government created a "bogus bidding process" because it appears as though it had already chosen the F-35 when the mandatory requirements were written.


"They tried to rig the process by defining something that only one plane could meet," Mulcair told reporters. "It's a very old strategy in government procurement, but even there we're now finding out the F-35 doesn't meet the bogus requirements that they were setting out in their rigged bid.


"They're bringing us down a corridor that can only result in one thing, the purchase of that one [plane] because their next argument is going to be 15 years later we can't start changing our mind," he said.


Alan Williams, a former defence department official who was involved in Canada signing on to the Joint Strike Fighter program, also says the proper procurement process wasn't followed.


But Christopher Alexander, parliamentary secretary to Defence Minister Peter MacKay, denied the allegations that the bidding process was rigged.


"Absolutely not and it's misleading Canadians to say so," he said on Tuesday's Power & Politics program.


When asked if he finds it unusual that the statement of requirements was written less than two months before the plan to buy the planes was announced, Alexander said "it is an exceptional project because it is a new technology that is still being developed."


Alexander said the plane is still under development and the government expects that it will fully meet all of the requirements.


U.S. Defence Secretary Leon Panetta, in Ottawa for a meeting Tuesday, said the program is subject to a high degree of oversight as the planes are developed. Canada, the United States and a number of other countries are jointly paying to develop the planes and buy them.


"We remain very confident that this plane can do everything it's being asked to do in terms of performance. We've been testing it and we continue to evaluate it as we proceed," he said.


Lockheed Martin, a U.S.-based company, said in a statement that it "has high confidence the F-35 program will meet Canada's requirements."


Loading Slideshow...
  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    FIIn this file photo taken on July 14, 2011 and released by U.S. Air Force, a USAF F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter (JSF) aircraft soars over Destin, Fla., before landing at its new home at Eglin Air Force Base. Japan selected the Lockheed Martin F-35 stealth fighter Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011, to replace aging jets in its air force and bolster its defense capability amid regional uncertainty. (AP Photo/U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Joely Santiago)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    A F-35 Lightning II sits on stage during the United Kingdom F-35 Lightning II delivery ceremony on July 19, 2012 at Lockheed Martin Corporation in Fort Worth, Texas. The ceremony marked the first international delivery of an F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to a partner nation. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    (Photo by Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    Plane models stand outside the Lockheed Martin Corporation during the United Kingdom F-35 Lightning II Delivery Ceremony on July 19, 2012 in Fort Worth, Texas. The ceremony marked the first international delivery of an F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to a partner nation. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jet sits in front the entrance of the Asian Aerospace 2004 show in Singapore 24 February 2004. The Asia Pacific offers one of the world's strongest prospects for defence-related spending, US aerospace giant Lockheed Martin said Tuesday as it expressed confidence in remaining a major supplier to the region's governments (AFP PHOTO/ROSLAN RAHMAN)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    (AFP PHOTO/CARL DE SOUZA)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    A Lockheed Martin's F-35 Lighning II fighter jet sits on the tarmac for static display at the Singapore Airshow in Singapore on February 12, 2012. Boeing's much-delayed 787 Dreamliner is set to star at the Singapore Airshow this week where companies touting private jets and defence hardware to the Asian market will also be out in force. (ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    (ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • F35 JSF Take Off

  • F-35A Flight with External Stores

    On Feb. 16, 2012, the first external weapons test mission was flown by an F-35A conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL) aircraft at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The F-35A is designed to carry up to 18000 pounds on 10 weapon stations featuring four weapon stations inside two weapon bays, for maximum stealth capability, and an additional three weapon stations on each wing.

  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

    IN AIR, NAVAL AIR STATION PATUXENT RIVER, MD - FEBRUARY 11: (EDITORS NOTE: Image has been received by U.S. Military prior to transmission) In this image released by the U.S. Navy courtesy of Lockheed Martin, the U.S. Navy variant of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the F-35C, conducts a test flight February 11, 2011 over the Chesapeake Bay. Lt. Cmdr. Eric 'Magic' Buus flew the F-35C for two hours, checking instruments that will measure structural loads on the airframe during flight maneuvers. The F-35C is distinct from the F-35A and F-35B variants with larger wing surfaces and reinforced landing gear for greater control when operating in the demanding carrier take-off and landing environment. (Photo by U.S. Navy photo courtesy Lockheed Martin via Getty Images)

  • F-35 First Ship Landing

    Courtesy: NAVAIR/JSF Program/Lockheed Martin

  • F35 Hovering

  • F-35 Flight Test Highlights

    Highlights of F-35 flight testing at NAS Patuxent River, Md., NAS Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base, and Edwards AFB, Calif.

  • F-35 Performs First Night Flight

    The first night flight in the history of the Lockheed Martin F-35 program was completed on Jan. 19, 2012 in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Piloted by Lockheed Martin Test Pilot Mark Ward, AF-6, an F-35A conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL) variant, launched at 5:05 pm PST and landed after sunset at 6:22 pm

  • F-35 Airstart Testing

    An F-35 test pilot talks about airstart testing at Edwards AFB, Calif., in early 2012.

  • F35 Air Show

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CANADA POLITICS

Opposition MPs demanded answers from the government on the F-35 fighter jet purchase Tuesday following a CBC News story that raised questions about the process used to choose the aircraft...
Opposition MPs demanded answers from the government on the F-35 fighter jet purchase Tuesday following a CBC News story that raised questions about the process used to choose the aircraft...
Filed by Christian Cotroneo  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 43
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
photo
Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
11:44 AM on 03/31/2012
The Cons rely on people NOT having access to the information you have provided links to.

Thank you Donna for your dedication.
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
12:14 AM on 04/01/2012
No problemo...grin

Raised to see the forest for the trees...& help others out of the forest..
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:48 PM on 03/30/2012
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27qdB1D0s9M&feature=player_detailpage

&
http://us.mobile.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE72B2KB20110312?irpc=932

&

http://www.defencetalk.com/notations-on-the-cost-of-the-f-35-and-other-aircraft-24627/

&

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story.jsp?channel=defense&id=news/awst/2011/03/21/AW_03_21_2011_p27-297530.xml&headline=null&next=0

&

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/pm-disputes-pentagon-price-tag-for-f-35s-says-canada-not-affected-by-cost-hikes-118923274.html

&

http://www2.parl.gc.ca/sites/pbo-dpb/documents/F-35_Cost_Estimate_EN.pdf :
It is 65 pages long. It is a fairly easy read, with very few statistical terminology.

&

http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/The-F-35s-Air-to-Air-Capability-Controversy-05089/

&

http://www.ausairpower.net/jsf.html

&

eurasiacritic.co.uk/articles/worried-about-price-gas-end-us-wars

&

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/truth+about+those+jets/4153489/story.html

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/opinion/important+fact+left/4167986/story.html

&

To oversee projects, the Pentagon uses the Earned Value Management System (EVMS), a detailed analytical tool that enables in-depth insight into a program's progress on cost and schedule.

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story.jsp?id=news/awst/2011/01/10/AW_01_10_2011_p51-279440.xml&channel=defense

&

Report of F-35 Data Theft Spotlights Flaws

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/02/15/canada-f-35-fighter-contract_n_1280213.html

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story.jsp?id=news/THEFT042109.xml&headline=Report%20of%20F-35%20Data%20Theft%20Spotlights%20Flaws&channel=defense
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:44 PM on 03/30/2012
http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/search/basicsearch_articles.jsp?wect=0&wdct=0&numberOfTotalHits=0&startIndex=1&sortType=date&OASKeyword=F35

BTW: There are 611 articles regarding the F35.. your OWN research..lol
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:40 PM on 03/30/2012
Melmoth stated:

Within the CF project management community LockMart is universally described in words the moderator would not allow me to publish.

I managed a very small contract (a few million) with them. The man who had written the propose for LockMart l (since retired) openly admitted that they had deliberately low balled the proposal to knee-cap their competitors. The corporate strategy was then to find holes in the contract (or con the project manager) to get billable rework.

They tried it on me to con a $¼ million extension to the contract. Fortunately, the Project Director (the man who writes the contract) was one of the most competent officers in DND (he later quit DND in disgust) and his SOW (statement of work) was bulletproof. I held them to the contract and they grudgingly had to do the rework gratis as per the contract because they had tried to slip through work out of spec.

From your earlier post quoting AWST.

"Several aerospace industry executives from four different companies say that Lockheed lacked a proper EVMS "culture," and they were not surprised by the decertification. They declined to talk on the record owing to the sensitivity of the subject."

The understatement of the last two centuries.

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story.jsp?id=news/awst/2011/01/10/AW_01_10_2011_p51-279440.xml&channel=defense

Oh yeah I know how LockMart works

Canadians need to know also
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:34 PM on 03/30/2012
Check out the truth of the matter below http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27qdB1D0s9M&feature=player_detailpage
&DND denies F-35 flaw claims they've been doing a lot of dening these days so here's the facts for all who care to ponder on them
link http://www.ausairpower.net/jsf.html
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:34 PM on 03/30/2012
Canada has already invested $150 million (U.S.) in JSF. The government has also decided to take part in the next phase of the aircraft's development, agreeing to invest around $500 million (U.S.) over the next 45 years. But according to government officials that investment does not automatically mean Canada will buy the plane.
( TruthSpeak)
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:32 PM on 03/30/2012
On one side you have Lockheed, the F-35's military managers and their paid and unpaid allies in the media and various think-tanks arguing that the program is sound and that setbacks are normal and temporary. On other side, every independent agency saying something else: that the F-35 is in trouble and is not the right choice for Canada.

The JSF program has gone six to nine months backwards in just over two years. In the same period the cost of the jet's development — never mind planned production of around 3,000 copies — has increased by $21 billion or 61 percent.

Originally, F-35s were scheduled to enter service starting in 2012. Now, the first squadrons will be combat-ready by 2016 at the earliest.

These changes amount to an inevitable correction for a jet that was under-bid, over-designed, forced onto cash-strapped allies through dirty diplomacy, rushed through early testing and launched into low-rate production too soon.

Want to get REALLY depressed about the Harper Regimes favorite, no bid jet? Read this comprehensive analysis, that proves unequivocally that this is not the right aircraft for Canada:

http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/The-F-35s-Air-to-Air-Capability-Controversy-05089/
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:32 PM on 03/30/2012
UK downsized and delayed thier F-35 orders yet retain"lions share" of production
contracts as part of deal with Lockheed Martin's "foreign outsourcing".
To date, Ottawa has funded JSF production contracts through "Quebec, Alberta
and BC job creation grants, forgivable loans, also through Conservative "Action Plan" funding.
&

Julian Fantino channels $10 million tax dollars to his fundraisers.
Donna Meness
www.findmaisyandshannon.com
11:46 PM on 03/30/2012
BTW...
The hiring of Nigel Wright as Harper's new Chief of Staff, secured the contract for the F-35s. Prime Minister Stephen Harper's designated new chief of staff was until last week a director of a major U.S. aircraft manufacture...
01:16 PM on 03/28/2012
Sheesh Evan, the boys want their toys. Why do you have to do that pesky reporting stuff anyways........
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
11:13 AM on 03/28/2012
Conservatives bleeding and misleading nations. They do it well....................SOF.
SamEasy
You really don`t want to know.
01:16 PM on 03/28/2012
I think we should start calling them Neocons. And in Canada we MUST start referring to the Harper Gang as REPUBLICANS. IMO
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
08:40 PM on 03/28/2012
100% correct !

They have the same ideology and policies. They are one and the same. Having lived through and escaped the Conservative destruction of the States, I know what's on their agenda and it does not speak well for Canada.

Conservatives are a social disease that needs to be eradicated. Voting the only cure.
09:22 AM on 03/28/2012
Lets cut $7billion from the CBC and buy dysfunctional fighter jets that can't operate in the North! #harpernomics
06:51 AM on 03/28/2012
F35 has only one engine endangering pilots flying in the North. It cannot land on current runways. The number propsed only replaces half of the F18s. This means that the billions budgeted will have to double. Do we really need Stealth to protect Canada or do we need it to show off participating in more wars in foreign lands?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
03:59 AM on 03/28/2012
Conservatives rigging an aircraft procurement? I can't (**cough** - Airbus) (**cough** - Mulroney) believe that!
photo
Add In Canadia
Egotism is a weakness
03:09 AM on 03/28/2012
They're probably backing down due to the how the USA is dealing with the Trillion dollar jet that can't be flown, what with the backlash of the USA getting charged even more to make the jet flyable. Probably would have ended up with a similar situation of "Oh we can fix that problem, it's just going to cost you another billion dollars"
01:54 AM on 03/28/2012
The F-35 is just another Harper Criminal fiasco from a weak psychopath (the stupid ones who always get caught) Harper Criminal Charges under Elections Canada are now part of his legacy. Yes we have a known Criminal running Canada. He paid his $53,000 fine and paid back $200,000+. So now the F-35 fiasco. Perhaps just a way to slip some more money into their pockets like when Tony Clement and John Baird spent $83 Million that was supposed to be spent on Border upgrades but instead was spent buying votes and NO RECEIPTS!!!! You and I would end up in jail. These guys walk. Contempt of Parliament and selling off the Wheatboard against the wishes of Canadians contempt of Senate.. Harper scams always get caught! Back to the F-35's..I think we need to start looking under every decision and every rock that Harper is trying to hide more of his fraudulent activities. Yes the F-35 should put Harper, the Harper Party control freak, into hot water and hopefully jail! The arrogance of circumventing the legal process on bids is another nail in the Harper coffin. At this stage we need a FULL AUDIT of ALL financial decisions made under the Peace Order and Good Government statutes of Canada. Why do Canadians have to continue to look over our shoulders wondering what nefarious thing the Harper government will do next. Time to expose this organized-crime syndicate!