A Fight for the Future Fleet: Joly’s Gripen Gambit Threatens to Upend Canada’s $19 Billion F-35 Commitment
The decades-long, politically fraught saga of Canada’s next fighter jet has erupted into a full-scale public battle, with Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly delivering a seismic challenge to the nation’s military procurement orthodoxy. In a speech framed as a defence of Canadian economic sovereignty, Joly launched a direct and blistering attack on the government’s cornerstone commitment to purchase 88 F-35 fighter jets from American giant Lockheed Martin, labeling the $19 billion deal “a gift to American shareholders at the expense of Canadian jobs.”
Her remarks, which sent immediate shockwaves through Parliament, defence circles, and the aerospace industry, were not mere critique. They served as the launchpad for a potent alternative: a formal, serious evaluation of Sweden’s Saab Gripen E as the future backbone of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). The pitch hinges not on stealth, but on sovereignty—specifically, the promise of an unprecedented industrial and technological windfall for Canada.

The Gripen Promise: 10,000 Jobs and “Full Sovereignty”
While the F-35 program, managed by the U.S. Department of Defense, offers Canadian companies a chance to compete for global supply chain work, the Saab proposal is of a different magnitude. Joly outlined an offer that includes the full domestic production of the Gripen E fighter, a complete transfer of its source code and technology, and the establishment of sovereign, in-Canada maintenance and upgrade capabilities for the life of the fleet.
This package, advocates argue, would create an estimated 10,000 high-skill aerospace and manufacturing jobs, with a significant portion anchored in the politically crucial provinces of Quebec and Ontario. For union leaders and economic nationalists, it is a siren call. “This isn’t just buying a plane; it’s buying an industry,” said the head of Canada’s largest aerospace union. “With the Gripen, we wouldn’t just fly the jet, we would own it, understand it, and build it. That’s real security.”

The F-35’s Persistent Shadow: Delays, Costs, and Dependence
Joly’s broadside landed on fertile ground of long-simmering frustration. Canada’s involvement in the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program began in 1997, but the path to acquisition has been a marathon of delays, cost overruns, and political reversals. The stealth fighter, while a technological marvel, remains billions over its original global budget and years behind its initial schedule. Critics have long argued that Canada’s operational needs—particularly Arctic sovereignty patrols and continental defence under NORAD—are poorly served by a short-range, maintenance-intensive stealth platform designed for penetrating sophisticated enemy air defenses.
More fundamentally, the Gripen push taps into a deep-seated anxiety about technological dependence. With the F-35, critical software updates, mission data files, and even maintenance diagnostics are controlled by the U.S. government and Lockheed Martin. In an era of increasing geopolitical volatility, Joly’s framing asks a pointed question: Can Canada be a sovereign actor if the brain of its frontline fighter jet is entirely controlled by a foreign power?

The High-Stakes Crossroads
The government now faces a defining choice, one with billions of dollars and the future shape of its aerospace industry in the balance. Defence officials have invested enormous political capital in the F-35, arguing it is the only platform that ensures seamless interoperability with the United States and other NATO allies for the next 40 years. Switching course now would mean admitting a strategic misstep, facing intense pressure from Washington, and potentially incurring penalties for withdrawing from the program.
Yet, the Gripen offers a powerful, homegrown narrative: economic revitalization, technological sovereignty, and a fighter explicitly designed for the kinds of roles the RCAF most frequently performs. It represents a bold bet on a different kind of security—one built on industrial might and national control as much as on alliance partnership.

As the debate ignites, Canada stands at a rare procurement crossroads. Will it follow the well-trodden path of deep integration with the American defence behemoth, or will it seize what Joly frames as a once-in-a-generation chance to build its own sovereign defence industrial base? The battle for Canada’s skies has just become a battle for its economic future.