Canada has sent shockwaves through Washington after signaling it may walk away from the $100 billion F-35 fighter jet program, a move that reportedly infuriated T.R.U.M.P and stunned U.S. defense circles. The trigger was a blunt declaration from Industry Minister Mélanie Joly, who argued that Canada has not received enough jobs, industrial benefits, or technological returns from the F-35 partnership. Her words landed like a warning shot, reopening a defense decision many believed was locked in after more than two decades of participation.

At the heart of the controversy is a growing frustration in Ottawa over economic imbalance. Despite being a founding partner in the F-35 program since the 1990s and investing hundreds of millions of dollars, Canada has largely remained a subcontractor while most high-value manufacturing and intellectual property stayed in the United States. Analysts note that while Canadian firms gained work, they did not gain independence, leaving taxpayers footing the bill as core benefits concentrated in American aerospace hubs.
That dissatisfaction exploded when Sweden’s Saab entered the picture with a dramatic alternative: the Gripen E fighter jet, paired with a promise to build a full production line inside Canada. The offer includes up to 10,000 high-tech jobs, technology transfer, domestic maintenance, and a Canadian-based aerospace ecosystem capable of sustaining the aircraft over its entire life cycle. For Ottawa, it represents not just a plane, but a pathway toward manufacturing sovereignty and long-term industrial growth.
Supporters of the Gripen argue it is uniquely suited to Canada’s realities. Designed for harsh Nordic conditions, the aircraft is built to operate in extreme cold, from snow-covered runways and even highway strips—conditions that mirror Canada’s Arctic environment. Cost comparisons further fuel the debate: estimates place the Gripen’s cost per flight hour near $8,000, far below the F-35’s reported $35,000–$47,000 range, potentially allowing more patrols, more pilot training, and greater readiness.

The issue goes beyond performance and price to the question of technology control. The F-35 operates within a tightly closed U.S.-controlled ecosystem, requiring American approval for software updates, sensitive repairs, and weapons integration. Saab’s open-architecture model, by contrast, allows countries to integrate their own systems and weapons, a flexibility already demonstrated by Brazil. For Canada, that could mean empowering domestic research, innovation, and export potential rather than remaining dependent on foreign gatekeepers.
Politically, the fallout is immense. Washington views the F-35 as a cornerstone of NATO and NORAD interoperability and a powerful tool of alliance cohesion. A Canadian pivot toward the Gripen would signal that U.S. pressure can be resisted, potentially encouraging other allies to rethink their own dependencies. Backed by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s vision of rebuilding domestic manufacturing and supply-chain independence, Ottawa appears ready to challenge long-standing assumptions—forcing a high-stakes showdown between alliance loyalty, economic sovereignty, and the future of North American defense.