A-4 response[/i]: I probably should have made that a statement - 'Air Defence Command would not have accepted Skyhawks.' How do we know? Douglas pitched A-4s to Canada. NDHQ's response? Non, merci beaucoup!
Still seems odd, as that mission was for nuclear strike, not for fighters.
Frankly, the A-7 is the ideal plane for the RCAF NATO mission, but the definitive A-7E isn't available until 1967 or so.
Anyways,
let's assume that the CF104 deal goes through as happened in the late 1950s. CF104 is adopted in 1962 as a nuclear strike ground attack plane.
Since the CF-104 was replaced by the CF-5 in 1968,
buying the A-7E instead of the CF-5 would be a huge improvement in capability. It's got a terrain-following radar, so you can still fly in the European Winter nasty weather, or fly at night, or whatever. It's still got a pair of Sidewinders, and 1000rds of 20mm to feed that M61. It's also a more sophisticated aircraft, which will sting a lot less than buying the "monkey model" F-5. That has major industrial advantages if we can get Canadian companies making some of the electronics.
F-4s instead of CF101s: Then those F-4s need RCAF FOC in 1961.
Hrm. That would be tricky, as the USAF hadn't adopted the F-4 yet. Either just adopting the USN F-4B version (but that runs into the SAGE issue), or
delaying replacing the CF100s until 1963 to get USAF F-4Cs (-Ds aren't available until 1965, that's probably too long a wait to get a good northern interceptor).
I'd be highly tempted to delay the CF100 replacement until 1963, assuming that someone in the Canadian MoD had been hearing about the F-4 since 1958. Maybe a radar upgrade for the CF100s to tide them over till F-4Cs are available.
But getting F-4Bs would mean an easy upgrade to the AWG-10 in the -Js, and that gives a look-down-shoot-down capability
in 1966, and a Helmet Mounted Sight
in 1972!
Hell with it.
Buy F-4Bs in 1961, build some (or parts of them) in Canada like with all the other planes Canada has adopted.
Build a way to let the Navy electronics talk to USAF systems, Canada has good electronics engineers. Upgrade them to -J electronics (APG-59 radar and AWG-10 FCS) in 1967 or so. See if you can keep the IRST under the nose, remove ground attack modules from the system if you have to (I assume the IRST was removed due to weight issues). Further upgrade to AWG10B and the AVG-8 from the F-4S in the mid 1970s.
Multi-role Hornets: CAF/RCAF RW experiences showed that multi-role just means interceptors that time-out sooner.
Had not considered that issue, objection withdrawn.
Canadian Tornadoes are probably the ideal path for the third generation of RCAF jet interceptor (CF-100, F-4, Tornado ADV-C), adopted in the 1980s.