Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, General Deschamps and Colonel Burt, for joining us and helping us with our deliberations.
There's no doubt in my mind that the F-35 is a capable airplane, and you've outlined some of the details of that today. Of course, what bothers me a little bit is what I heard the other day from the Auditor General, and this was a quote on the Chinook. In paragraph 6.53 of the Auditor General's report, she says:
By June 2006, based on meetings and discussions with Boeing and the market analysis, National Defence had formally concluded that Boeing's Chinook was the only existing Western certified helicopter in production capable of meeting its needs.
In another paragraph, she says that you kind of informally decided the same thing six months before. She also says that the actual statement of requirements wasn't developed until a couple of years later, but the decision had been made and approval was received in June 2006 to buy the Chinook. I have to say that bothers me. Maybe the Chinook was the best plane, but I understand there were others, and the Auditor General said that the others weren't given a chance to compete on the statement of requirements. The former director or ADM for materiel told us that there's a problem to some extent with in-house analysis reflecting in-house bias.
Those two things together beg the question of whether or not we're actually getting what we should be getting.
I say this in the context of the minister's response in the House of Commons in May, where the minister talked about there being:
...an open, competitive, transparent process that will see us receive the best capability, to provide that capability to the best pilots in the world.
He reiterated the fact that this JSF project was not interfering with that.
Given those concerns here, is the statement of requirements that was surely developed for the JSF project back when they started in 2000, or thereabouts...is the existence of that and Canada's work on this joint strike fighter project leading your organization to draft the statement of requirements around that F-35?