Germany shelves new
anti-missile weapon and turns to drone defense
By: Sebastian Sprenger 6 hours ago
A Mikado electrically powered four-rotor
reconnaissance drone of the German military operates during a military training
in Munster, northern Germany, in 2017. German defense leaders in March 2021
proposed to buy new equipment for countering similar drones deployed by
adversaries. (Patrik Stollarz/AFP via Getty Images)
COLOGNE, Germany — The German Defence Ministry has
shelved plans for a next-generation air defense system, instead investing in
counter-drone technology and upgrades to the country’s aging Patriot fleet.
The announcement on Tuesday comes after months of
studying options between the costly Taktisches Luftverteidigungssystem, or
TLVS, aimed at destroying sophisticated missiles and aircraft, and cheaper
weapons for intercepting enemy drones.
Ministry officials told lawmakers they plan to
begin modernizing the Patriot missile defense inventory starting in 2023 to
keep the system usable through 2030. The decision amounts to a win for
manufacturer Raytheon Technologies, which had feared losing the preeminence of
its global cash cow over a novel system developed by a major European country.
In a second step, officials in Berlin want to
field a new defensive system against short-range threats, eventually replacing
the “old and qualitatively and quantitatively insufficient” Ozelot fleet,
according to a ministry statement. That project has the potential to spark
Europe-wide cooperation, officials said, pointing to the Dutch-German Apollo
program, under which both nations have integrated a portion of their air-defense
formations.
Joint acquisitions with other European Union and
NATO partners toward a “European drone and air-defense” system could be in the
offing, the statement added.
The steps outlined on Tuesday amount to a mere
proposal for German lawmakers, as there is no money programmed in Germany’s
midterm budget for major air defense investments.
The odds are diminishing for a more sophisticated
German defense system against hypersonic missiles, such as those developed
by Russia, anytime soon. That is because annual defense budget
requirements are set to exceed government spending plans with quickening speed
in the coming years.
Still, the German government has yet to formally
declare TLVS canceled, even though vendor MBDA Deutschland — the local partner
of main contractor Lockheed Martin — has begun planning its business posture without it.
“At the moment, there
is no decision yet about where things are going,” a German Defence Ministry
spokeswoman told
Defense News. “We’ll
first have to wait for clarity on the budget.”
Notably, the proposed Patriot upgrades will not
introduce significant new capabilities, including 360-degree coverage in threat
interception, according to the spokeswoman. That feature was a major driver in
the push for TLVS because it meant deployments would have a much lower
footprint and manning requirement than Patriot batteries, which can only fire
interceptors in one direction.
The 360-degree requirement remains on the books,
the spokeswoman confirmed Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Lockheed Martin officials “intend to
discuss with the customer in the next weeks how TLVS capabilities can
contribute to the Bundeswehr’s future design of ground-based air defense,” a
company spokesman wrote in an emailed statement.
The company’s doggedness may stem from a short
mention of “a TLVS” in the Finance Ministry’s latest budget proposal, dated
March 22. That document lists the system as part of a collection of programs
involving international obligations about which there is governmentwide
agreement for funding, at least in principle.
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