Airbus,
Dassault vie for leadership of Franco-German fighter
With the ink barely dry on a
deal between France and Germany to develop a new combat jet, Airbus and
Dassault are squaring up for leadership of a project that could reshape
Europe’s fragmented fighter industry.
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel
unveiled the plans at a summit in July, burying past defense industry rivalries
as part of efforts to tighten co-operation as Britain withdraws from the European
Union.
The new combat system could involve a mixture of manned and unmanned
aircraft and would eventually replace the Rafale and Eurofighter, rival jets
that compete fiercely for global sales, as well as the older Panavia Tornado.
That sets the tone for co-operation between Airbus, which represents
Germany and Spain in the Eurofighter consortium, and Dassault Aviation, the
manufacturer of France’s Rafale.
But there has been little formal discussion yet over the shape of the
project, let alone who would take the lead in development, according to
industry and defense officials.
Airbus, whose mostly Germany-based defense arm makes up about a quarter
of its sales, laid claim to the leading role in an op-ed article published on
Friday.
“On the assumption that the necessary political will is in place,
Airbus is offering to drive cooperation with its European partners and to shape
this aspect of our common European future,” Dirk Hoke, chief executive of
Airbus Defense & Space, wrote in Germany-based defense newsletter Griephan
Briefe.
He described his company as “the lead...for a project of this nature.”
Dassault has itself offered to be the “architect” of the Franco-German
project and Chief Executive Eric Trappier told Reuters recently that it would
be the natural leader due to its experience in building an all-French fighter
plane.[nL5N1KH7O7
Airbus’s call also appeared aimed at speeding up the project as Germany
looks to U.S. rivals to meet interim fighter gaps.
Germany earlier this year asked
Washington for a briefing on the Lockheed Martin F-35 fighter as it gears up to
replace its current fleet of fighter jets from 2025. It has also
asked for data on Boeing’s F/A-18E/F.
Hoke said buying American could weaken the European defense industry
and make it ever-more reliant on U.S. “black box” technology that is not shared
with foreign operators, while injecting uncertainty into Franco-German plans
for a new jet.
“An interim solution for the replacement of old fleets already appears
probable. If important decisions are delayed, a stopgap of this type could take
on a dimension that would cast doubt on the economic efficiency of the entire
project,” he said.
France and Germany said in July they aim to come up with a roadmap by
mid-2018 for jointly leading development of the new aircraft to replace their
existing fleets of rival warplanes.
Dassault Aviation appears to have been caught by surprise by July’s
announcement, which cut across its existing partnership with BAE Systems to
build a demonstrator for an unmanned combat vehicle, called Future Combat Air
System (FCAS).
Defense analysts say the French company is in a strong position to be
in the driving seat from a technological point of view, having made it plain it
regards BAE as its technological peer.
But at least for now, such considerations are likely to take a backseat
to how the project will be funded amid tight defense budgets, an industry
source said.
“It is quite normal for industrialists to claim leadership, but it is
too early to talk about that,” he added.
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