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In this episode of The Deep Dive, we examine the Canadian Army’s most consequential transformation since the Cold War. A sweeping, multi‑billion‑dollar plan is underway to rebuild the armoured corps for a world defined by high‑intensity conflict. At the centre of this shift is the Heavy Direct Fire Modernization project — a race against time to replace or overhaul Canada’s ageing Leopard 2 fleet before maintenance failures cripple readiness. We explore why the mid‑2030s have become a hard deadline, and what’s driving the urgency. Then we break down the contenders: Germany’s Leopard 2A8, America’s M1A2 SEPv3, and South Korea’s K2 Black Panther. Each offers power, protection, and prestige — but also trade‑offs in weight, delivery speed, and Arctic survivability. Beyond tanks, Ottawa is fast‑tracking 360 combat support vehicles and at least 250 new tracked Armoured Fighting Vehicles. It’s a push to restore mobility, lethality, and sovereignty across the North. But modernization isn’t just about buying steel. Drone warfare and electronic attack are rewriting the rules of armoured combat. Commanders are being forced to rethink doctrine that has defined tank warfare for a century. Meanwhile, the Parliamentary Budget Officer warns of a familiar problem: billions allocated, billions unspent. Procurement delays threaten to undermine the very strategy meant to prepare Canada for a harsher battlefield. We unpack the politics, the technology, and the stakes behind this armoured renaissance. Is Canada building a force ready for the next war — or repeating the mistakes of the last one? Join us as we dive deep into the future of Canadian heavy armour.
By Eric DemersIn this episode of The Deep Dive, we examine the Canadian Army’s most consequential transformation since the Cold War. A sweeping, multi‑billion‑dollar plan is underway to rebuild the armoured corps for a world defined by high‑intensity conflict. At the centre of this shift is the Heavy Direct Fire Modernization project — a race against time to replace or overhaul Canada’s ageing Leopard 2 fleet before maintenance failures cripple readiness. We explore why the mid‑2030s have become a hard deadline, and what’s driving the urgency. Then we break down the contenders: Germany’s Leopard 2A8, America’s M1A2 SEPv3, and South Korea’s K2 Black Panther. Each offers power, protection, and prestige — but also trade‑offs in weight, delivery speed, and Arctic survivability. Beyond tanks, Ottawa is fast‑tracking 360 combat support vehicles and at least 250 new tracked Armoured Fighting Vehicles. It’s a push to restore mobility, lethality, and sovereignty across the North. But modernization isn’t just about buying steel. Drone warfare and electronic attack are rewriting the rules of armoured combat. Commanders are being forced to rethink doctrine that has defined tank warfare for a century. Meanwhile, the Parliamentary Budget Officer warns of a familiar problem: billions allocated, billions unspent. Procurement delays threaten to undermine the very strategy meant to prepare Canada for a harsher battlefield. We unpack the politics, the technology, and the stakes behind this armoured renaissance. Is Canada building a force ready for the next war — or repeating the mistakes of the last one? Join us as we dive deep into the future of Canadian heavy armour.