French
Air Force receives first of upgraded Rafale F4 fighter aircraft
Mar 7, 09:26 PM
French President Emmanuel Macron, followed by French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu (2nd R), walks past a Dassault Rafale fighter aircraft during his New Year address to the French Army at the Mont-de-Marsan air base, southwestern France, on Jan.20, 2023. (Photo by Bob Edme/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
STUTTGART,
Germany — The French Air and Space Force has received the first of its most
sophisticated Rafale fighter jets, reaching a milestone after four years of
development.
The
service’s Air Warfare Center, located on the 118th air base in southwestern
France, took possession of the first F4.1 standard Rafale on March 2, the
Ministry of Defense announced in a March 7 statement.
Development
of the F4 standard kicked off in 2019, when then-Armed Forces Minister Florence
Parly signed a €2 billion ($2.12 billion) contract with manufacturer Dassault.
The
aircraft was originally one of several F3R-standard Rafales delivered
starting earlier this year to the French
military procurement office Direction Generale de l’Armement (DGA).
The aircraft underwent a “software transformation” and transitioned to the F4
standard at the DGA’s flight test center in Istres, near Marseille, per the
ministry release.
A
second F4 aircraft is expected to be delivered in the coming weeks. The jets
will then be integrated into the service’s 30th Fighter Wing to begin training
in anticipation of an Initial Operating Capability (IOC) decision.
France’s
DGA began flight tests for the F4 standard in April 2021, and the aircraft is
slated for full availability by 2025.
The
new standard includes upgrades to existing capabilities like the Thales AESA
radar and Talios targeting pod along with the Rafale’s electronic warfare
system and communications suite.
New
capabilities for the F4 include the Thales Scorpion Helmet Mounted Display,
MBDA’s MICA NG (Next-Generation) air-to-air missile and the 1,000 kilogram
variant of Safran’s AASM (armement air-sol modulaire) “Hammer” precision-guided
munition.
The
new aircraft is expected to serve as a bridge between the Rafale and France’s
next-generation fighter being developed alongside Germany and Spain under the
trinational Future Combat Air System (FCAS) program, slated to be fielded
around 2040.
The
January delivery of the F3R standard aircraft marked the first Rafale delivered
to the nation’s military after a four-year pause. France’s proposed 2023
defense budget, released in September 2022,
includes 42 new Rafales, including 30 under the forthcoming Tranche 5 contract.
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