Silent Eagle wins S. Korea's FX fighter competition (by default)
Winner, winner, kimchi dinner. After eliminating the F-35 from South Korea's FX fighter competition, Seoul has now disqualified the Eurofighter Typhoon from the process as well. Although EADS Typhoon bid came under the 8.3 trillion won ($7.2 billion US) budget, it did so by reducing the requested amount of two-seat fighter from 15 to 6, as well as basing prices on the British pound. (S. Korea's insistence on 15 two-seat fighters begs the question of why the single-seat only F-35 was even considered). So what can Canada learn from South Korea's FX selection? The main reason the F-35 was disqualified was because Lockheed Martin could not offer a fixed price based on the US government's foreign military sales regulations. By American law, no foreign country can acquire US made military hardware for less than what it costs the US military. Since the F-35 is still in development, final pricing is still unknown. Also, since the F-35's price will be determ