Admiral Beez
Major
I've often thought that the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II would have done well in Canadian service in place of the CF-101 Voodoo, CF-104 Starfighter and CF-116 Freedom Fighter. There are some challenges, unit cost being top of mind of course, especially as many of the Voodoos were bought second hand on the cheap. Also, the Starfighters and Freedom Fighters were assembled in Canada, creating jobs and financial offsets. There's also the matter that only the NORAD-focused Voodoo needed two aircrew, meaning that the ETO-focused squadrons would need double the aircrew. The biggest matter is timing, as without a replacement the RCAF will be flying the increasingly obsolete CF-100 Canuck and CL-13 Sabre into the 1960s.
So, given the above, how do we get the Phantom into RCAF service instead of the Voodoo, Starfighter and Freedom Fighter?
Maybe start by kiboshing the pricey Avro CF-105 Arrow project by the Canadian subsidiary of the UK's Hawker-Siddeley Group before it got started? That program alone cost CAD $400 million, or $3.7 billion today (in the 1960s a F-4E cost about CAD $2.5 million). To keep some aerospace jobs in Canada the Phantom could be assembled in Canada, like in the UK and Japan - though the top Canadian engineers will still likely leave for NASA, etc. as they did when the Arrow program was canceled.
Had Canada got the Phantom do we think they'd still get the CF-18 Hornet in the 1980s? Other NATO and Allied players kept their Phantoms well into the 1990s, including Greece, Germany, Japan and Britain.
So, given the above, how do we get the Phantom into RCAF service instead of the Voodoo, Starfighter and Freedom Fighter?
Maybe start by kiboshing the pricey Avro CF-105 Arrow project by the Canadian subsidiary of the UK's Hawker-Siddeley Group before it got started? That program alone cost CAD $400 million, or $3.7 billion today (in the 1960s a F-4E cost about CAD $2.5 million). To keep some aerospace jobs in Canada the Phantom could be assembled in Canada, like in the UK and Japan - though the top Canadian engineers will still likely leave for NASA, etc. as they did when the Arrow program was canceled.
Had Canada got the Phantom do we think they'd still get the CF-18 Hornet in the 1980s? Other NATO and Allied players kept their Phantoms well into the 1990s, including Greece, Germany, Japan and Britain.
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