At some point we just need to put the names of the suppliers in a hat and have the GG pull one out. Paralysis by analysis indeed.
This is not a case of paralysis by analysis.
DND thinks it can just decide what pistol it wants in an arbitrary manner, and then craft an "open tender" with requirements that are so tight only one company can meet it.
If it wants to sole source it, then they need to justify it properly and use the correct process for sole source, which would immediately be challenged anyways by other companies who have a case to make that they are being left out.
Bottom line is there are lots of good pistols out there, there is no justification for a sole source, and there is likewise no justification for the current specifications that amount to a de facto sole source.
Wanting the Same Pistol that the US has, does have some merit with regards to interoperability. If Canada wanted to do that then we could just use existing international trade agreements and ask the US Army to exercise its contract options to buy and additional 20,000 units which canada would then purchase from the US Army. The problem is our specs are not identical to what the US has.
When you get into the weeds, there were lots of things in the last tender that made no sense.
DND wanted a pistol with modular frames and interchangeable grip sizes, but the only size they were buying was medium. They wanted the manufacture to guarantee that there was an established market for 'competitive' sourcing of additional sizes later. This would lead to a situation where you are either buying OEM grips, and the OEM is in an uncompetitive situation where they can literally charge the CROWN whatever they wanted for grips, or they wanted the OEM to guarantee that there were third parties making after market grips, which is of course something that the OEM could not possibly guarantee, but it would actually be against their interest to guarantee because they would have to guarantee the existence of their competitors.
The tender required that the grip size be changeable by the operator, AND to have a fully removeable FCU. Requiring grip size to be variable makes sense for all the difference sized hands there are in the CAF. Specifying the manner in which grips are changed is unnecessary, and specifying that grips can be changed by back strap but must also have a fully removeable FCU is entirely redundant and without justification.
It could have made sense if CAF ONLY wanted the FCUs, barrels and slides, and told line units to adopt a BYOGrip policy. Or maybe each member of CAF gets measured and issued their own personal grip which they retain, and only the FCU and slide bits get issued when required.
The FCU requirement was a blatant attempt to disqualify Glock.
The requirement to not require a trigger pull on dissassembly is much easier to substantiate, and likely would have disqualified Glock anyways. I don't know if Glock makes a pistol that does not have this requirement.
I don't love Glocks, but Glock deserves a fair chance to bid, and CAF needs a good enough pistol and they needed it ten years ago. The procurement folks need to stop mucking around and just get on with a fair process and accept the results.