What I don't understand about this whole business of Canada wanting to buy Australian F/A 18s is that Canada originally purchased 138 F-18s but downsized their fleet to the current 80, or so, airframes. What happened to the other 60-odd airframes?
Yes Canada did originally procure 138 Classic Hornets, 98 A's and 40 B's.
But in the early 2000's when they started to upgrade them (similar to the upgraded RAAF configuration from what I remember), they only upgraded a total of 80 airframes, 62 A's and 18 B's.
And since then they have lost another three, think the fleet is down to 77 airframes (in total they have lost about 20 aircraft since entering service).
With the current size if their fleet (77) and with losses (20), that leaves approx. 40 airframes that were not upgraded in the early 2000's.
I think it is fair to say that those 40ish airframes have probably been picked over, and even if they haven't, they will be in their original 'pre-upgrade' configuration, and depending how well they have been stored (or not), well that's another issue too.
So if I was the dumb schmuck who was stuck as being the Canadian Defence Minister at this moment, and if I've been given my riding instructions from the Canadian PM to find another 'interim' solution, then yes, the soon to be retired RAAF Classic Hornets are probably as good as it gets!
At the end of the day, I don't mind our Canadian cousins procuring some of our retiring Classic fleet, but I don't want to see one single airframe leave Oz until their is sufficient F-35A's delivered, and we are well into the transition from one to the other.
And I especially want to see the 'best of the best' kept here until the last F-35A arrives in 2023 too.
Cheers,