F-35 Procurement Process 'Manipulated'

CBC  |  Posted: 05/05/2012 2:54 pm Updated: 05/08/2012 2:32 pm


The government not only misled Canadians regarding the costs of the F-35 but the procurement process was "manipulated" to achieve the government's objective, says a retired bureaucrat who has penned a new book titled Canada, Democracy and the F-35, which is due out on Monday.


In his new book, Alan Williams, the former assistant deputy minister (Material) for National Defence who signed Canada into the second phase of the F-35 program in 2002, challenges various government assertions surrounding the F-35 and details how the procurement process was rigged in favour of the F-35 deal.


In an exclusive interview airing on CBC Radio's The House, Williams tells host Evan Solomon the decision to sole-source the F-35 "began with a breakdown in accountability and a hijacking of the process by the bureaucrats."


Williams explains that the military is responsible for telling the bureaucrats what they need in a document called the statement of requirements (SOR). Once approved, the bureaucrats are supposed to take that SOR and invite suppliers to bid on it. Only when bureaucrats have found a winning bidder can a recommendation be made to the minister in charge.


According to Williams, "the exact opposite sequence of events" took place in the case of the F-35.


Williams tells Solomon that in 2006, a note signed by Dan Ross, the senior bureaucrat responsible for procurement at National Defence, and sent to the minister of National Defence (then Gordon O'Connor), said the military had conducted its own review and concluded that the F-35 was the best aircraft to replace Canada's aging fleet of CF-18s.


The note from Ross to O'Connor reads: "The JSF family of aircraft provides the best available operational capabilities to meet Canadian operational requirements, while providing the longest service life and the lowest per aircraft cost of all options considered."


There are several problems with this note, Williams says.


For one, it precedes the actual SOR, which was only completed in 2010. Williams says "the procurement process was clearly undermined and manipulated to achieve a predetermined outcome."


Second, the note shows the bureaucrats "abdicated" their responsibility by allowing the military to use internal analysis to advise on the desired solution, Williams says.


Finally, the military simply "did not have all the necessary information from other suppliers" to reach the conclusion presented in the 2006 note to the minister of National Defence.


Government still misleading the public, Williams says


When Solomon asked Williams whether he thought the government had misled the public with respect to the costs of the F-35s, Williams said "for sure, they misled."


But according to Williams, the government didn't just mislead Canadians with respect to the costs, it is also misleading Canadians now through a handful of "false" statements being repeated day in and day out by the ministers in charge of overseeing the process.


According to Williams, the following most frequently heard statements made by the Conservatives are "all false":


- There was a competition in 2001, so there is no need to conduct another one.


- Canada needs the F-35 because of the industrial and regional benefits.


- The government was just continuing along the lines established by the previous Liberal government.


- The F-35 is the best aircraft at the best price.


- The F-35 will cost the $75 million US.


"The costs may be a lot higher than we expect and that's why you want to do a competition where you compare capabilities and compare prices and have a public debate about which best suits Canada," says Williams, who believes it's not too late to have an "open, fair and transparent competition."


Last week, Kevin Page, the parliamentary budget officer, told CBC Radio's The House it appeared the government was keeping "two sets of books" with respect to the costs of the F-35s — one for internal use, and one for public "communications."


This week, appearing before the public accounts committee, Robert Fonberg, deputy defence minister, rejected that suggestion, saying there was "one book" with separate columns.


After committee, the public watchdog was once again asked whether he thought the government had misled the public with respect to the costs of the F-35s.


"Yes," Page responded.


The government has consistently maintained it did not mislead Canadians with respect to the costs of the F-35s and has accepted the recommendations made by Auditor General Michael Ferguson in his report last month.


Part of the government's response to the auditor general's findings is establishing a national fighter procurement secretariat under the purview of Public Works and Government Services to oversee the process of replacing Canada's aging fleet of CF-18s.


Earlier on HuffPost:

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  • The following is a <a href="http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/04/f35-videos/?pid=1183&pageid=78707&viewall=true" target="_hplink">compilation of the worst and most hilarious propaganda videos</a> on the F-35 fighter jet.



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The government not only misled Canadians regarding the costs of the F-35 but the procurement process was "manipulated" to achieve the government's objective, says a retired bureaucrat who...
The government not only misled Canadians regarding the costs of the F-35 but the procurement process was "manipulated" to achieve the government's objective, says a retired bureaucrat who...
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01:07 AM on 05/13/2012
When ever it comes to ANY Canadian Military Aviation fiasco, I am totally shocked by people's short sightedness when all they can come up with is tracing things back to the AVRO Arrow and the BOMARC Missle. Protecting their BOMARC program was only the tip of the iceberg.

The big Canadian claim to fame in the space industry is the "CanadArm". Whooo hooo...

How is it that we stop at BOMARC and totally forget that the US Space Program grew leaps and bounds on the back of ex-patriot Canadians ............. put on the unemployment line by the cancellation of the Arrow! NASA snapped these experts up as fast as you can say "green card exception".

Just think of where Canada would be sitting if our advanced aerospace industry hadn't been sold out to protect a failing American one?

Isn't it funny to think that when the US Navy went looking for a replacement for the F-18, and after looking at all the options, one astute member of the Navy evalution team simply stated that what they really needed was just a bigger F-18 ........... thus begat the birth of the "Super Hornet".........

The Americans failed at designing thier own V/STOL fighter once already .... why do you think they threw in the towel and bought Harriers from the British???

All we need is new CF-18's. It is STILL the best all purpose, all theatre fighter/bomber on the planet.
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Peter Manierka
89 and going strong
09:29 PM on 05/07/2012
Its agreat plane,when not flying it can be used
as asubmarine
01:47 PM on 05/07/2012
Alan Williams ill informed comments are unsubstantiated, every claim and conclusion is questionable and make good fodder for his book release. I am sure we can find his new book under fiction.
01:46 PM on 05/07/2012
It would be interesting to know everything behind the scenes on this one. I think Canada in general, regardless of government is bullied/manipulated by the US. It is not inconceivable that we may have had no choice in the matter.

I heard a story, albeit second or third hand, about the submarines that we bought. According to a soldier, close to the situation, they are decent subs. Sure they need work, but otherwise good. What he also said was that Canada was blocked every step of the way to getting any kind of sub. In fact, the US didn't want us to have these ones in particular, because they are very difficult to detect and track, thus allowing us to spy on them spying on us.

just thoughts....
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PortlandZoo
Wait... what?
10:42 AM on 05/07/2012
I'm starting to wonder new whether there is anything that the harpies are NOT misleading Canadians about. This is the well used "shotgun" technique employed by the W cabal from 2000-2008 - do lots of bad stuff all of the time so the public and the media can't focus on any one thing. Worked for W and the world is still paying for it. I wonder what Canada will look like when steve is finished with it.
06:28 PM on 05/06/2012
What? You mean a no-bid process where the winner is a company well known for lying about timelines and costs of their products, and a jet that nobody else in the world seems to like or support and where the government lied about the true costs is NOT above board? That's unpossible!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I Think
05:16 PM on 05/06/2012
What real use are these aircraft, all they can do is shoot down similar aircraft and bombers. Who on earth is going to send such fighters against Canada.
Any threat to Canada will be from allies buying our resource companies, or from terror groups. These aircraft are useless against either of these threats.
03:21 PM on 05/06/2012
Rather then buy sporty little jets to bomb the middle east we should design and build our own long range missile paltforms/sky burst interceptor. The only reason we're being suckered into buying the CF 35 is to be able to say 'oh yeah, we're part of this international coalition' to go ruin some random desert despots day without having to make the polticly hard choice to send in the infantry.
This is a a multi-billion dollar 'get out of leadership' free card stashed away for the future. It's not needed or wanted in the same way our own territorial defence is.
03:14 PM on 05/06/2012
How deliciously ironic is that it wa the Airbus scandal that led to the rise of the Reform party back in the day?

Hows that accountability and transpareny in Ottawa doing for ya now that you got in office?
02:42 PM on 05/06/2012
Don't forget folks, a few days ago the DND stated that "Global needs trump domestic concerns".

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/global-needs-trump-domestic-concerns-on-f-35-dnd-says/article2422158/

The purchase of the F35 has absolutely nothing to do with Canada's defense in the arctic and everything to do with "playing with the big boys". Sad but true that we have a Department of National Defense who doesn't feel Canada's interest should trump Global interests. Perhaps it's time to let the "global interests" pay DND's wages instead of Canadians.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
03:10 PM on 05/06/2012
This is the real problem that is rarely brought up. We should be focuse on building our own planes, built for our unique defence needs. If Harper used half of his formidable bull-rushing skills to push for in house development, he would be a hero instead of having to duck and hide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
03:12 PM on 05/06/2012
Last time we focused on building our own planes, a conservative government shut everything down, destroyed the prototypes, and forced the military to buy a bunch of yankee planes they didn't want.
02:05 PM on 05/06/2012
We all know that these guys are fighting way to hard to defend this purchase there is something that exchanged hands and the usual culprit is money. These planes just due to their actual flight time should of been ruled out for a Canadian application not to mention being single engined (when it get one approved). this was a plane designed for vertical take off application that others tryied to make into something it is not a great little replacement fighter to replace the Harrier Jet style vertical takeoff short range fighter, not something to be used to defend the second largest country in the world. Not mention that for 1/2 the price the new Russian fighter will blow it out of the sky.
12:58 PM on 05/06/2012
what is it about cons and jets that make them so stupid?

deifenbaker dumped the avro arrow program bending to pressure from the u.s. when canada was poised to be a world leader in the aviation market

now harpo and his band of not so merry men rig the procurement process so that an expensive, non working jet is purchased to pay back his corporate m-i complex overlords

and he keeps our troops dying in afghanistan for no good reason
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mad Hatter 1
12:57 PM on 05/06/2012
The F-35 is much like British Columbia's fast ferries fiasco...you'll be able to pick these puppies up for pennies on the dollar, there's money to be made in scrap metal.
Dinsdale Pirahna
"lookin' out the 'ole in the wall"
12:19 PM on 05/06/2012
Why why why? If the jet doesn't meet our needs then WHY is the Harper Governmentâ„¢ so stubbornly trying to buy them? The answer to that is to follow the money. It's a sure bet that there are kick-backs involved in this boondoggle.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
03:05 PM on 05/06/2012
Where is Mulroney when you need him?
03:23 PM on 05/06/2012
They also turned the buyign programme over to the Tresury Department... with Clement in charge.

I hate to use the guilt by association thing... but red flags are waving, ya know.
Rantibus
Cogito, Ergo Rant
11:28 AM on 05/06/2012
The aircraft is not only into massive cost-overruns, but it's not even in its final test phase.
It's HUD device currently doesn't function properly,
It's vaunted stealth capabilities only function on direct approach angles - anywhere else and it lights up screens like a Christmas tree,
It's internal weapons bays (to cut down radar profile) hold less ordinance than the F-18's wing hardpoints,
There is considerably more wing turbulence than previously expected,
Its airframe is not rated for the life of the aircraft,
etc,etc...
We bought the subs the Aussies turned down, now we're going to buy the fighters they turned down too.