German
lawmakers greenlight $344 million support package for future P-8 fleet
Jul 12, 04:06 PM
A sailor assigned to the Grey Knights of Patrol Squadron 46 signals the pilot in the flight station of a P-8A Poseidon during a pre-flight check in Oak Harbor, Wash. (Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Austin Ingram/Navy via AP)
SIEGEN, Germany — German lawmakers
have approved a support package for the country’s five Boeing P-8A Poseidon
maritime-surveillance aircraft ordered last year for $1.1 billion, as defense
officials ponder if more of the planes will be needed.
Members of the parliamentary defense
and budget committees last week gave the green light to spend €342 million
(U.S. $344 million) on crew training, an initial set of spare parts and future
software upgrades. German parliamentary procedures dictate that all investments
exceeding €25 million must have the panels’ blessing.
Based in Nordholz on Germany’s North
Sea coast, the Germany navy expects to start flying the Boeing-made Poseidon planes in late 2024,
replacing the service’s P-3C Orion fleet that officials say is on its last
legs. Maritime surveillance and anti-submarine warfare, for which the new
aircraft are optimized, play a key role in Germany’s naval defense calculus, as
submarine technology is traditionally considered a Russian strong suit.
Meanwhile, questions are still
swirling here about how many additional P-8 aircraft, if any, the government
will opt to buy. A parliamentary aide told Defense News defense leaders were
tasked with submitting an assessment by Sept. 30 about the future fleet size,
per a legislative mandate, called a “Maßgabebeschluss,” attached to the 2022
defense spending bill.
Manufacturer Boeing has yet to be
approached about a request for additional planes, according to a company
spokesman in Berlin. There is also no new foreign military sales case
publicized by the U.S. government about what German defense officials and
lawmakers close to the Nordholz base say could involve seven extra Poseidons.
Those planes would be bought through
an unprecedented defense cash infusion of €100 billion approved
by the Bundestag, Germany’s parliament, in the spring. Pressure to spend that
money quickly over several years favors off-the-rack purchases, like P-8s from
the United States, because Germany’s armed forces can begin using the equipment
without lengthy development work.
Notably, defense officials treat the
P-8 Poseidon buy, however many it will entail in the end, as an interim
solution, according to a defense ministry statement. That verbiage is a nod to
a longstanding plan to develop a bilateral aircraft program, dubbed the
Maritime Airborne Warfare System, with France.
Those planes are meant to take to the
skies beginning in 2035, though France has reportedly cooled to the cooperative
program, even more so after Germany’s commitment to the brand new Boeing-made
planes.
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