Italien, Großbritannien und Japan hoffen, Deutschland an Bord ihres Kampfflugzeugprojekts der nächsten Generation zu holen

    https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2026/02/20/italy-the-united-kingdom-and-japan-hope-to-bring-germany-on-board-their-next-generation-fighter-jet-project_6750673_19.html

    Von EquivalentKick255

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    18 Kommentare

    1. EquivalentKick255 on

      As the Future Combat Air System (FCAS) project that was developed with France and Spain is facing unprecedented threats, will Germany seek new partners? This idea has been circulating since statements made on December 4, 2025, by Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto. Speaking before Parliament, he mentioned the possibility that Germany might „in the future“ join the next-generation fighter jet project developed by Italy in collaboration with the United Kingdom and Japan. According to Italian media, Council President Giorgia Meloni and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz even discussed this scenario in January during a summit in Rome.

      The Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), which was launched by a treaty signed in December 2022 between the UK, Italy and Japan, has not encountered the same obstacles as the FCAS, with the three countries having opted for centralized and balanced governance through a joint venture. Named „Edgewing,“ it brings together the British defense contractor BAE Systems, Italy’s Leonardo and Japan Aircraft Industrial Enhancement, with each holding one-third of the capital. It has been operational since June 2025 and aims to fly its first demonstrator before 2027, with the system entering service in 2035 – five years ahead of FCAS.

      The arrival of a new partner, especially one with deep pockets (Germany has planned to spend €100 billion this year on defense), would be a crucial asset for GCAP advocates, given that the program’s costs have exceeded initial projections. The three governments leading the project have even considered opening it up to Saudi Arabia to ease their financial burden.

      The Italian Parliament approved on Thursday, February 12, a funding plan of €8.77 billion, bringing the cost of the project’s initial phase to €18.6 billion, compared to around €6 billion in 2021 when the program was first outlined.

      Concerns in the UK

      There have also been growing concerns in the UK about the government’s ability to sustain the financial commitment required for GCAP. According to an article published on February 1 in the Daily Telegraph, London has delayed the signing of a trilateral agreement with Italy and Japan, as budget allocations for the UK Ministry of Defence in the coming years have yet to be finalized or guaranteed.

      According to industry sources cited by the outlet, progress on the Tempest – the name of GCAP’s fighter jet – has continued using available UK resources, but these budgets will be depleted within a few months. „There is a real risk of delay [to the program] if this issue is not resolved,“ one of those sources stressed.

      However, joining such an advanced project would not be easy for Germany. It would raise questions about cost-sharing and the role of German industry in the consortium. Key positions have already been allocated: Rolls-Royce (UK), IHI (Japan) and Avio Aero (Italy) are working together on propulsion system design and development. Leonardo (Italy and the UK), Mitsubishi Electric (Japan) and ELT Group (Italy) are developing detection instruments, non-kinetic effects and integrated communications systems. Such a move would also call into question certain agreements between French and German companies made as part of FCAS, such as the partnership between Safran and MTU on engines.

    2. Any-Original-6113 on

      The article is behind a paywall, so it’s unclear what form of participation they’re offering: full membership or „preferred customer“ status?

    3. FlaviusAurelian on

      Introducing the Spitfire – Messerschmitt – Mitsubishi – Jet Fighter!

    4. Glittering-Skirt-816 on

      Good luck italians and brits ! France is happy to lend it to you.

      Joking aside, it would be good if one were a pure fighter and the other a fighter-bomber. But anyway, the FCAS is well advanced.

    5. Gentle_Snail on

      Never understood why France/Germany/Spain didn’t follow a similar model:

      >The Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), which was launched by a treaty signed in December 2022 between the UK, Italy and Japan, has not encountered the same obstacles as the FCAS, with the three countries having opted for centralized and balanced governance through a joint venture. 
      >
      >Named „Edgewing,“ it brings together the British defense contractor BAE Systems, Italy’s Leonardo and Japan Aircraft Industrial Enhancement, with each holding one-third of the capital. It has been operational since June 2025 and aims to fly its first demonstrator before 2027, with the system entering service in 2035 – five years ahead of FCAS.

    6. Visual_Ingenuity3258 on

      Would be a W for all parties involved. And since there seem to be financing issues, Germany joining right now could be great. Big pocketzz 🇩🇪🇪🇺

    7. Germany and then Spain too probably joining the UK and Italy. It’s the Eurofighter again, but with Japan and maybe even Sweden, with France going Rafale.

    8. Beyllionaire on

      You’ve heard Merz. Germany is lost and doesn’t know what to do next. They’ll simply keep buying F-35s until the mid 2030s when they’ll finally decide what to do.

      Germany has many options but absolutely none of them are better than FCAS, hence why they’re hesitating.

    9. OkKnowledge2064 on

      I do feel a bit uneasy with joining a project by three countries that are very pro-US with Japan being basically dependent on the US for security

    10. Definitely_Human01 on

      I think 3 partners is already enough.

      We’ve already got things planned out and agreed. Why complicate things by adding one more country?

      I have nothing against having junior partners with less/no say in the major stuff, but I think the current structure of primary partners is good as it is.

    11. Good news ! This new fighter will as good as the Eurofighter….

      Good luck to Italy, Uk and Japan. They will earn a partner with no expertise on critical parts of a fighter but that will request a major share of the project.

    12. WhereTheSpiesAt on

      There is nothing in this article which suggests anything that the headline claims.

      It mentions what we’ve already seen numerous articles talk about which is Meloni spoke to Merz about the program, the UK nor Japan are mentioned in this article in relation to discussing the matter with Germany or hoping they join for that matter.

      All it does is rehash unproven talking points, for example financing “issues” which don’t really exist, the estimates for the UK haven’t increased much, Government finances are doing pretty well and exceeding expectations freeing up extra money so once the DIP is released it’s expected the UKs money will follow, Italy has already approved its funding and Japan has more than enough money with how much it’s invested into defence in the past few years.

      The article provides no evidence or commentary that either Japan or the UK are interested in Germany joining, never mind “hoping”.

    13. _teslaTrooper on

      Joining another project with nations that require carrier capable aircraft, Germany should just buy a carrier at this point so they can finally agree with someone on the specs for a joint fighter program.

    14. Problem with all this is that UK, FR, GER, IT, SP and SW all have duplicative capabilities for a single fighter jet need.

      What’s needed is to differentiate the capability:
      1. 6th gen highly advanced twin engined strike fighter that is currently what GCAP and FCAS are trying to be.
      2. 4.5th/5th gen lesser advanced single engined strike fighter that air forces can use in less threatening environments, or where the loss of the aircraft isn’t a high risk of allowing advanced tech into enemy hands, or where operator nations can donate them to other countries (like Ukraine, Taiwan).
      3. I’d also argue that Europe needs a stealthy intercontinental bomber like its own B-21. It doesn’t have to be as advanced, but something that can fly a 20-hr sortie and lob several dozen hypersonic down-range.

      Then divide up the industrial base between the European counties to take each on.

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