After fifteen years of flying Boeing tankers, Italy has signed a €1.39 billion contract with Airbus for six A330 MRTT multi-role tanker transport aircraft. The contract was signed on 16 April 2026 and made public through the EU’s TED procurement portal on 19 May.
It is the largest single defence aviation purchase Italy has made in years, and the politItaly has signed a €1.39 billion contract with Airbus for six A330 MRTT multi-role tanker transport aircraft.
The contract was signed on 16 April 2026 and made public through the EU’s TED procurement portal on 19 May. It is the largest single defence aviation purchase Italy has made in years, and the political symbolism is impossible to miss.
The deal closes a process that began in 2022 when Italy initially selected the Boeing KC-46 Pegasus as its preferred tanker. That programme was cancelled in July 2024, citing changed and unforeseen requirements.
A subsequent European tender launched in 2024 ended in April 2025 without any offers meeting the required technical specifications. Only in December 2025 did a single proposal remain on the table: that of Airbus, which led to the definitive contract signing in April 2026.
Why the Boeing Deal Fell Apart
The KC-46 Pegasus has had a troubled development history. An Accident Investigation Board report released in August 2025 documented $23 million of damage caused by the aircraft’s refuelling boom nozzle binding to receiving aircraft in three separate incidents.
The aircraft’s Remote Vision System suffered from image distortion, poor depth perception and sensitivity to dynamic lighting, issues serious enough that the US Air Force restricted certain refuelling profiles at night or in challenging light conditions.
Boeing flew an overhauled RVS 2.0 for the first time only in November 2025, beginning a testing phase aimed at resolving the tanker’s long-standing technical problems.
Technical reliability was one reason. The geopolitical context was another. Italy’s decision to cancel the Boeing contract in 2024 coincided with a broader European reassessment of defence procurement dependency on American suppliers, accelerated by the Trump administration’s unpredictable stance toward NATO allies.
What Italy Is Buying
The A330 MRTT is already operated by France, Spain and the United Kingdom, as well as several other NATO allies through a pooling arrangement. The six new aircraft will replace Italy’s four existing Boeing KC-767A tankers, which have been in service since 2011. The contract includes ten years of logistical support covering maintenance, spare parts and operational assistance.
Had Italy proceeded with the KC-46, it would have become the only European operator of Boeing’s Pegasus tanker, an increasingly isolated position as NATO allies consolidate around the Airbus platform.
The A330 MRTT purchase aligns Italy with the dominant European standard and simplifies interoperability with France, Spain and the UK in future coalition operations.
The Bigger Picture
The tanker decision does not exist in isolation. It arrives at the same moment that Italy is investing in the GCAP sixth-generation fighter with the UK and Japan, receiving its first Italian-built F-35B from the Cameri facility, signing onto NATO’s new spending pledges, and asserting itself as the dominant European power in the Mediterranean.
Each of these decisions individually could be explained by operational necessity. Together they describe a country that is deliberately reshaping its defence posture.
As Euronews noted, the tanker deal is not just a competition won. It is a decision that shifts the centre of gravity of Italy’s air defence, which is now looking increasingly to Europe within the NATO framework.
The timing matters too. Italy cancelled the Boeing contract in 2024, before Trump’s second term had fully clarified the transatlantic picture. The fact that Airbus was the only bidder left standing by December 2025 suggests that the European defence industry was ready and waiting for exactly this kind of pivot. Rome has obliged.
Boeing is garbage today. The quality has gone down to ***.
Randyguyishere on
Here comes Trump to fix this free market decision
AcanthocephalaEast79 on
The decision was made in 2024.
layoffthemeth on
It says nothing except that Airbus gave them a better deal
Nuthetes on
Even without Trump, the decision to ditch Boeing makes sense if you want your plane to actually work and not drop out of the sky
Boeing should have folded after the MAX fiasco, they only survived because they are an American company and America wouldn’t let Europe dominate the airliner market, so they werne’t held accountable.
Old_Impact2797 on
Viva ITALIA!
Well done.
v_for_vegetta on
Buy eu only. Even in coke cola. Not even a cent to us companies when you can avoid it
Massimo25ore on
For those interested, here’s the public report about the procurement
The Boeing KC-46 tanker program has been an operational disaster for the US Air Force for years – chronic delays, delivered with known deficiencies, remote vision system problems that still aren’t fully fixed. Italy would have had a clear view of all of this through NATO channels while they were still flying their KC-767s.
Meanwhile the A330 MRTT has been working reliably for Australia, the UK, France, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Singapore, and South Korea. This isn’t even a close call on operational track record. The commercial quality issues get the headlines, but Boeing’s defense aviation side has been just as troubled. International tanker competitions have gone to Airbus repeatedly over the past decade for good reason.
What’s interesting is the timing – major European defense procurement moving away from US platforms while NATO is supposed to be tightening integration. That’s a signal about confidence in Boeing’s ability to deliver functional hardware more than any political statement.
ISayHeck on
Turns out Italy prefers their airplanes without that surprise landing feature
TheManWhoClicks on
Buying military airplanes from another country requires decades of trust, stability and good relationships. The US seems to be a bit shaky with all 3 these days. Makes sense. Imagine being held hostage via denial of service and spare parts for your military.
Any-Original-6113 on
Wonderful
TzeBigLebowski on
Good call, I only fly airlines that has Airbus planes.
RessurectedAccount on
Good. Fuck Boeing.
johnkoetsier on
The US is learning that when you’re a bully and a jerk to everyone, no-one wants to be your friend.
Economy-Rise1108 on
Well, Donny did demand that Europe become less reliant on USA for their defence…
TheBroken51 on
If it’s Boeing, I’m not going…
Minimum-Sleep-3916 on
There’s some real breakups, and new hookups going on in Geo-politics. Momentus times in world history. The current admin has mad us the toxic waste incel that no one wants to be seen with. Oh the irony… 😄
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After fifteen years of flying Boeing tankers, Italy has signed a €1.39 billion contract with Airbus for six A330 MRTT multi-role tanker transport aircraft. The contract was signed on 16 April 2026 and made public through the EU’s TED procurement portal on 19 May.
It is the largest single defence aviation purchase Italy has made in years, and the politItaly has signed a €1.39 billion contract with Airbus for six A330 MRTT multi-role tanker transport aircraft.
The contract was signed on 16 April 2026 and made public through the EU’s TED procurement portal on 19 May. It is the largest single defence aviation purchase Italy has made in years, and the political symbolism is impossible to miss.
The deal closes a process that began in 2022 when Italy initially selected the Boeing KC-46 Pegasus as its preferred tanker. That programme was cancelled in July 2024, citing changed and unforeseen requirements.
A subsequent European tender launched in 2024 ended in April 2025 without any offers meeting the required technical specifications. Only in December 2025 did a single proposal remain on the table: that of Airbus, which led to the definitive contract signing in April 2026.
Why the Boeing Deal Fell Apart
The KC-46 Pegasus has had a troubled development history. An Accident Investigation Board report released in August 2025 documented $23 million of damage caused by the aircraft’s refuelling boom nozzle binding to receiving aircraft in three separate incidents.
The aircraft’s Remote Vision System suffered from image distortion, poor depth perception and sensitivity to dynamic lighting, issues serious enough that the US Air Force restricted certain refuelling profiles at night or in challenging light conditions.
Boeing flew an overhauled RVS 2.0 for the first time only in November 2025, beginning a testing phase aimed at resolving the tanker’s long-standing technical problems.
Technical reliability was one reason. The geopolitical context was another. Italy’s decision to cancel the Boeing contract in 2024 coincided with a broader European reassessment of defence procurement dependency on American suppliers, accelerated by the Trump administration’s unpredictable stance toward NATO allies.
What Italy Is Buying
The A330 MRTT is already operated by France, Spain and the United Kingdom, as well as several other NATO allies through a pooling arrangement. The six new aircraft will replace Italy’s four existing Boeing KC-767A tankers, which have been in service since 2011. The contract includes ten years of logistical support covering maintenance, spare parts and operational assistance.
Had Italy proceeded with the KC-46, it would have become the only European operator of Boeing’s Pegasus tanker, an increasingly isolated position as NATO allies consolidate around the Airbus platform.
The A330 MRTT purchase aligns Italy with the dominant European standard and simplifies interoperability with France, Spain and the UK in future coalition operations.
The Bigger Picture
The tanker decision does not exist in isolation. It arrives at the same moment that Italy is investing in the GCAP sixth-generation fighter with the UK and Japan, receiving its first Italian-built F-35B from the Cameri facility, signing onto NATO’s new spending pledges, and asserting itself as the dominant European power in the Mediterranean.
Each of these decisions individually could be explained by operational necessity. Together they describe a country that is deliberately reshaping its defence posture.
As Euronews noted, the tanker deal is not just a competition won. It is a decision that shifts the centre of gravity of Italy’s air defence, which is now looking increasingly to Europe within the NATO framework.
The timing matters too. Italy cancelled the Boeing contract in 2024, before Trump’s second term had fully clarified the transatlantic picture. The fact that Airbus was the only bidder left standing by December 2025 suggests that the European defence industry was ready and waiting for exactly this kind of pivot. Rome has obliged.
[Fuckin door fell off](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_Airlines_Flight_1282)
Wonderful news
Boeing is garbage today. The quality has gone down to ***.
Here comes Trump to fix this free market decision
The decision was made in 2024.
It says nothing except that Airbus gave them a better deal
Even without Trump, the decision to ditch Boeing makes sense if you want your plane to actually work and not drop out of the sky
Boeing should have folded after the MAX fiasco, they only survived because they are an American company and America wouldn’t let Europe dominate the airliner market, so they werne’t held accountable.
Viva ITALIA!
Well done.
Buy eu only. Even in coke cola. Not even a cent to us companies when you can avoid it
For those interested, here’s the public report about the procurement
https://ted.europa.eu/en/notice/-/detail/340509-2026
Good. Trump can’t switch them off like the F-35
But, will China follow ?
The Boeing KC-46 tanker program has been an operational disaster for the US Air Force for years – chronic delays, delivered with known deficiencies, remote vision system problems that still aren’t fully fixed. Italy would have had a clear view of all of this through NATO channels while they were still flying their KC-767s.
Meanwhile the A330 MRTT has been working reliably for Australia, the UK, France, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Singapore, and South Korea. This isn’t even a close call on operational track record. The commercial quality issues get the headlines, but Boeing’s defense aviation side has been just as troubled. International tanker competitions have gone to Airbus repeatedly over the past decade for good reason.
What’s interesting is the timing – major European defense procurement moving away from US platforms while NATO is supposed to be tightening integration. That’s a signal about confidence in Boeing’s ability to deliver functional hardware more than any political statement.
Turns out Italy prefers their airplanes without that surprise landing feature
Buying military airplanes from another country requires decades of trust, stability and good relationships. The US seems to be a bit shaky with all 3 these days. Makes sense. Imagine being held hostage via denial of service and spare parts for your military.
Wonderful
Good call, I only fly airlines that has Airbus planes.
Good. Fuck Boeing.
The US is learning that when you’re a bully and a jerk to everyone, no-one wants to be your friend.
Well, Donny did demand that Europe become less reliant on USA for their defence…
If it’s Boeing, I’m not going…
There’s some real breakups, and new hookups going on in Geo-politics. Momentus times in world history. The current admin has mad us the toxic waste incel that no one wants to be seen with. Oh the irony… 😄