Canada to buy fewer F-35 fighters than thought
Mon May 12, 2008
OTTAWA, May 12 (Reuters) - The Canadian government said on Monday it
would buy 65 new F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, a figure lower than the 80
planes that had widely circulated in the media. "One of the reasons
there will be fewer of the new fighters is we
anticipate the new fighters will have significantly greater capacity
than
existing fighters," Prime Minister Stephen Harper told a news
conference. He was speaking in Nova Scotia as he unveiled what he
called the Canada
First Defence Strategy, involving C$30 billion ($30 billion) in
projected
new military spending for the next 20 years.
The F-35s will replace Canada's CF-18s, which are scheduled to reach
the
end of their working lives in 2017-20. Canada bought 138 of them in the
1980s and now has 98, 80 of which are being refurbished. Lockheed
Martin Corp will make the F-35s. The
Joint Strike Fighter program is being funded by the United States,
Canada
and seven other countries.