Dassault eyes lead role in new European fighter jet project: CEO

FRANKFURT / Reuters

France’s Dassault Aviation aims to take the lead on the development of a new European fighter jet, its chief executive told a German magazine.
“Experience has shown, if you want a defence project to be successful it needs someone to be responsible, a leader,” German weekly WirtschaftsWoche quoted Eric Trappier as saying in an interview.
France and Germany are expected to announce initial details about the planned new warplane development programme at the ILA Berlin Air Show, which starts on April 25.
The two countries are due to sign a 10-page common operational requirements document at the airshow that outlines their militaries’ basic needs for future air combat systems, one of several planned Franco-German defence projects.
The new combat system could involve a mixture of manned and unmanned aircraft and would eventually replace Dassault’s Rafale, and the Eurofighter, built by Airbus, Britain’s BAE Systems and Italy’s Leonardo. The companies involved – Dassault, MBDA, Thales and Safran and Airbus — are racing to prepare some kind of initial memorandum of understanding as well, but no details have yet been finalised, according to industry sources. The scale of the development effort points to a cooperative approach, although some have called for the naming of one lead nation and contractor to avoid the problems seen on the multinational A400M military transport programme. “We can take the lead role,” Dassault’’s Trappier told.
He said he did not expect resistance from Airbus if it was given a junior role in the project.

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