European sixth-generation concept fighter
aircraft by RodrigoAvella
|
Andrea Shalal
NOVEMBER 30, 2017 / 3:56 AM
BERLIN (Reuters) - A Franco-German program to develop a
European fighter jet will likely be widened to include other countries to lower
costs, officials with the German defense ministry and Europe’s Airbus said on
Wednesday.
France and Germany unveiled the plans in July, burying
past rivalries as part of a raft of measures to tighten defense and security
cooperation.
Companies in Britain, Italy and Sweden have expressed
interest in participating in the multi-billion-euro program, that is widely expected
to be led by Airbus and France’s Dassault Aviation.
Bertram Gorlo, Airbus Defence and Space’s head of key
account management for Germany, Austria and Switzerland, told a panel at the
Berlin Security Conference that details were still being worked out, but he
expected the program to be expanded to include more partners than just Germany
and France.
“I think ... we will have to ask for the support of other
nations,” he said.
France and Germany aim to come up with a roadmap by
mid-2018 for jointly leading development of the new aircraft to replace their
existing fleets of warplanes.
Brigadier General Gerald Funke, head of the strategic
defense planning and concepts division at the German defense ministry, said
development of the next-generation aircraft system would likely begin the 2020s
with the goal of seeing it enter into service in 2045.
In the meantime, he said Germany was looking at buying an
existing aircraft to replace its aging fleet of 85 Tornado jets beginning in
2025.
Funke said it would be tough to avoid the national
rivalries over jobs and other considerations that plagued earlier international
programs like the A400M military transport plane.
“In Europe, we’re in a world where we still have national
interests, industrial interests. And the more partners you have the more
complicated it is,” he said.
“On the other hand, I‘m also fully convinced that we will
not be able to afford a national solution alone. The key is the will of the
partners to cooperate and to find compromise.”
Gorlo told the panel that Airbus successfully coordinated
with many partners on each of its commercial airliners.
“The question is less about the number of partners, it’s
more about the governance model under which we contract,” Gorlo said.
He said the German defense ministry had already expressed
interest in setting up a “lead nation” or “lead industry” concept for the new
fighter program, which could help ensure a more efficient and streamlined
development process.
Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Andrew Heavens
Original post: reuters.com
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