Ottawa has started to make payments for key components for 14 additional U.S.-built F-35s, even as the Carney government has been reviewing future fighter-jet purchases in the context of trade tensions with Washington, sources have told CBC News.
The money for these 14 aircraft is in addition to the contract for a first order of 16 F-35s, which will start being delivered to the Canadian Armed Forces at the end of the year.
According to sources, the new expenses are related to the purchase of so-called “long-lead items,” which are parts that must be ordered well in advance of the delivery of a fully assembled aircraft.
Canada had to make these expenditures to maintain its place in the long-term delivery schedule and avoid being replaced by other buyers in the queue, sources said.


The original info-sharing deal - called Beyond the Border Action Plan - began with Obama and Harper in 2011 and included actions like Addressing Threats Early and Cross-Border Law Enforcement.
The CBC has written extensively on its implementation.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/data-sharing-citizens-border-1.5210803
Thanks… I hate it. There is a part of the article that asks ‘where does it stop?’ My answer is it does not.