- Reaction score
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- Points
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Weapons/Ammunition: Weapons currently in the Canadian Armed Forces inventory that can be employed on the F-35A fleet will be retained. In the case of the F-35A, the project acquisition cost estimate provides for the acquisition of an initial stock of gun ammunition and countermeasures (e.g., flares), as the existing stock of CF-18 gun ammunition and flares are incompatible with the F-35A. Over the life cycle of the replacement fleet, the acquisition of newer weapons will be considered and funded as separate projects.
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/reports-rapports/ngfc-cng/index-eng.asp#3i
Ammunition according to KPMG, DND and the Secretariat.
Ammunition that is unique to the aircraft will be procured for the aircraft. Ammunition that hangs from the aircraft is considered separately. Existing ammunition will be used and/or replaced when and as necessary. New munitions will be purchased just the way they are now: as separate projects. The NGF does not predict the likelihood of acquiring air dropped hovering sharks with lasers in 2040.
In other words, ammunition is generally treated like pilots and runways. We have them now. We will continue to have them. The aircraft the pilots fly, the aircraft the runways receive, the aircraft that transport the ammunition will change. All else will stay the same.
Submariner's sub might be replaced but he, his torpedoes and his home port will remain unchanged.
Edit (Further thought): Submariner may be issued Harpoons at some point in the future. Equally those Harpoons could be added to ammunition carried by the F35. Those projects would be funded separately.