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Menaced by Trump, Canada Prepares to Join E.U. Military Industry Efforts
(www.nytimes.com)
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I have no expertise in military technology and cannot speak to the superiority of F-35s, the magnitude of their tactical advantage, nor the factors that justify or mitigate their operating cost. But the auxiliary benefits of buying into Saab's ecosystem are accumulating into quite the stack. Given that our military strength is somewhat predicated on economic strength, I like seeing us take a path that grows both. The latter pays dividends even if we fight no real wars nor avert any theoretical ones.
And ultimately, Lockheed Martin's technological advantage is built on capital investment and mindshare. With sufficient resources consolidating elsewhere, that can be eventually rivaled. Even before that point, we're looking at facing rivals with lesser tech than the Gripen, or rivals that control the F-35 program and its supply lines. The upsides are just too context-sensitive.
Future wars look like they’re going to be more and more about who can last longer in wars of attrition and manufacturing, so this is a good bet in my books too.
If Canada is playing défense in a war, we’re going to need to force it to be asymmetrical and distributed with drones like Ukraine is doing.