9 décembre 2023 | Local, Aérospatial

Last operational CC-115 Buffalo finds final resting place at Canada Aviation and Space Museum - Skies Mag

The last operational CC-115 Buffalo, No. 115-452, now resides in the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, safely preserved for generations to appreciate.

https://skiesmag.com/news/last-operational-cc-115-buffalo-final-resting-place-canada-aviation-space-museum/

Sur le même sujet

  • Military has no documents about fighter jet 'capability gap,' a claim used to justify aircraft purchase

    19 novembre 2018 | Local, Aérospatial

    Military has no documents about fighter jet 'capability gap,' a claim used to justify aircraft purchase

    David Pugliese, Ottawa Citizen Neither Canada's top soldier nor the commander of the air force had or produced any records about a fighter jet “capability gap” in the year leading up to the Liberal government's announcement that such a critical issue had to be dealt with by spending billions to buy aircraft. Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan used the capability gap argument in November 2016 to justify a $5-billion program to buy new Super Hornet jets, a deal since scuttled, and later a $500-million program to purchase used F-18 planes from Australia. But in the year leading up to Sajjan's announcement about the urgent need to acquire such planes, neither Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Jon Vance nor Lt.-Gen. Mike Hood, then head of the Royal Canadian Air Force, produced any documentation indicating there was ever a capability gap, according to Department of National Defence's Access to Information branch. In addition, no such documents exist among the records of various members of Sajjan's staff, according to the department. It would be normal practice to have hundreds, if not thousands of pages of records, discussing such a key defence issue or gap if it existed, military insiders tell Postmedia. But records obtained by Postmedia through the Access law do show that just before Sajjan's announcement that the 18 jets were needed in the “interim” to deal with the capability gap, the minister was told the existing fleet of CF-18s was in better shape than expected and could keep flying until 2032. Conservative MPs allege the capability gap didn't exist and was concocted by the government to delay a larger project to buy new jets, a competition that might end up selecting the F-35 stealth fighter the Liberals vowed never to purchase. When asked about the lack of documentation about the capability gap, a DND official said the department could not comment. Taxpayers may get more information Tuesday when the Auditor General's office releases its examination of the fighter jet plan. Full article: https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/military-has-no-documents-about-fighter-jet-capability-gap-claim-used-to-justify-aircraft-purchase

  • Investing in defence will keep Canadians safe and help the economy

    17 novembre 2021 | Local, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR, Sécurité

    Investing in defence will keep Canadians safe and help the economy

  • MBDA to supply Sea Ceptor weapon system for Canadian CSC frigates

    20 avril 2021 | Local, Naval

    MBDA to supply Sea Ceptor weapon system for Canadian CSC frigates

    MBDA announced on 19 April it has been awarded a contract from Lockheed Martin to equip the Royal Canadian Navy's (RCN's) new single class of 15 Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) multimission frigates with the Sea Ceptor air-defence weapon sy...

Toutes les nouvelles