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Canada Weighs Saab’s GripenGlobalEye Offer as Leaked RCAF Scorecard Backs the F-35

Ottawa is weighing a jobs‑heavy, build‑in‑Canada offer against military assessments favoring F‑35 interoperability.

Overview

  • Saab’s proposal ties Canadian industrial benefits to buying 72 Gripen E fighters and six GlobalEye surveillance aircraft, with final assembly and supplier work proposed in Ontario and Quebec.
  • The GlobalEye portion would be built with Bombardier on the Global 6500 platform to meet Canada’s airborne early warning and control requirement.
  • Leaked internal RCAF documents reported by Canadian media show the F-35 scoring about 95 percent versus roughly 33 percent for the Gripen E, with low marks for mission performance and upgradability on the Swedish jet.
  • Canada has already paid for 16 F-35s even as the broader fighter acquisition is under review, raising questions about costs and the risk of operating a mixed fleet.
  • RCAF leaders and outside analysts warn that selecting Gripen or splitting the buy would strain training, sustainment and NORAD/Five Eyes integration, while Saab claims its package could generate up to 12,600 Canadian jobs.