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Rafale, Eurofighter Developers Close To ‘Seal The Deal’; Was French ‘Strategic Autonomy’ Hinderding The FCAS Program?

The FCAS sixth-generation fighter jet program is back on track. As EurAsian Times reported recently, France and Germany have decided to bury the hatchet and move ahead with the ‘already lagging’ program.

Why FCAS Was Getting Delayed

Germany, France, and Spain constitute the Future Combat Air System (FCAS) project. In late 2017, France and Germany disclosed their intention to jointly develop and build a future fighter aircraft to replace the Rafale and Eurofighter, respectively, as part of a wider FCAS, also known as the New Generation Aircraft (NGF).

In February 2020, they signed a €150-million investment agreement to fund early prototyping and to scope work on the system. Spain officially joined the program in December 2020 as the prime contractor for low observability within the consortium.

The first flight of the future fighter prototype is expected in 2030. Entry into service is planned for between 2040 and 2045.

On the other hand, Tempest is being attempted by Britain, Italy, and Sweden. Britain first mooted the idea in 2018, with the support of its industrial majors such as BAE Systems, Leonardo UK, MBDA, and Rolls-Royce.

Italy and Sweden agreed to join the UK in this endeavor the same year. The fighter’s entry into the services is slated to be in the early 2030s.

Rafales, Typhoons On Their Way Out

Both the planned fighters are expected to replace combat aircraft currently in use by four military services in three European nations – French Rafale multirole fighters, including their carrier-capable ‘M’ version; German Eurofighter Typhoons — focused on air-to-air missions; and Spanish Typhoons, which also fulfill a ground attack role. 

France wants the aircraft to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons with a distinct set of data links to guarantee a secure command and control architecture. 

The aircraft in both programs are also expected to fulfill virtually the entire spectrum of modern combat air missions over land as well as sea.

Secondly, the planned programs are not limited to advanced fighter jets alone. Given the rapid strides the unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) or drones have taken in warfare in recent years, they are being developed as “a System of Systems” (SoS) that includes the use of drones as well as a variety of artificial intelligence and autonomous systems.

It may be noted that the 6th generation fighters envision a high degree of decentralization and automation of tactical functions, implying a further shift from human-controlled, platform-centric concepts to intelligent “systems of systems.” Some even advocate that manning them should be optional.

Currently, European fighters include the Eurofighter Typhoon, Rafale, and Swedish Gripen. They all are labeled “generation 4.5” and comparable to 5th-generation US aircraft – the F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Lightning II – in electronic and handling characteristics. Still, they are said to be lacking effective stealth features.

FCAS

France-Germany Tension Over FCAS?

However, there are now some reports that tensions exist between France and Germany on some fundamental issues like intellectual property rights, industrial work share, operational priorities, and the relationship of the FCAS project to other joint endeavors, such as an upgrade program for the Tiger helicopter gunship.

France, represented by Dassault, is seen as particularly sensitive about access to its nuclear-capable supply chain. Germany, whose interests are represented in the project by Airbus, wants an equitable industrial share.

But then the fact remains that, unlike Germany, France is a nuclear power and has its own nuclear deterrent. Besides, France, while remaining in the US-led NATO, has its own strategic autonomy and wants to play a much bigger international role by projecting its power.

Conversely, Germany is usually considered a “defensive power” that prefers to work in consort with other powers in the European Union and NATO. It does not share, therefore, the sensitivities that France is very particular about: “the nuclear delivery mission; long-range power-projection (strike) capabilities; and carrier-capable combat air to operate from the successor to the Charles de Gaulle.”

A mockup of Europe’s Next-Generation Fighter at the 2019 Paris Airshow. (Wikipedia)

Germany is specifically opposed to any nuclear dimension. For Germany, it is enough if a combat aircraft is good enough to undertake the defensive counter-air mission against potential threats to German and NATO allies in Europe.

The second primary source of potential problems is industrial work share arrangements. The French government maintains national control over strategic industrial capabilities.

Amos Dossi and Niklas Masuhr of the Center for Security Studies (CSS) at ETH Zürich point out that the system has bred an institutionally ingrained tradition of state-industry interaction, active steering, and direct ownership.

By contrast, in German – and, equally, Spanish – politics and administration, the willingness and ability to constructively influence the domestic defense industry appear much less developed.

The relationship between the French state and its military aerospace sector, especially Dassault, is a close one. France routinely puts significant diplomatic clout behind Dassault export campaigns and views maintaining a capable sovereign combat air industrial base as an important long-term policy objective.

For Germany, too, maintaining a strong industrial base and skilled jobs is a critical political consideration. However, export controls are likely to prove a significant sticking point, given Germany’s political reluctance to sell military equipment to governments with poor human rights and non-proliferation records.

Given this background, there are Franco-German tensions regarding how the partners can agree on the export prospects of the new fighter jet. France is a votary of pragmatic export rules” and will never like the German vetoes on sales. And this is all the more so as France, all told, is the lead partner in the project because of its superior experience.

With companies such as Dassault (systems integration in aerospace) and Safran (jet engines), France has maintained a national industrial base capable of autonomously developing and manufacturing systems across a broad spectrum of military applications.

Germany (Spain, too), by contrast, has long shifted most of its ambitions for autonomy from the national to the European level.

Smooth Sailing For Tempest

In contrast, there is a relatively high degree of compatibility in the Tempest program. Britain, Italy, and Sweden appear to be looking for weapon systems of similar operational properties.

Their approaches toward defense-industrial cooperation are also similar in their essential pragmatism. The manufacturing capabilities they can contribute to joint development and production efforts display a notable degree of potential complementarity.

Dossi and Masuhr argue that the Tempest consortium setup displays several potential advantages in politico-industrial terms. Overall, security-related cooperation among these countries appears largely unencumbered by political symbolism and lock-in effects.

Britain, Italy, and Sweden are similar in their “selective” notions of defense-industrial autonomy as well as in their sober, synergy-driven approaches toward that end. Respective ties are close, with the UK-based multinational BAE Systems acting as the hinge.

File Image: Tempest

BAE Systems has cooperated on a high level for many years with the Swedish firm SAAB as part of the Gripen project. Similarly, BAE System is involved with the Italian Leonardo conglomerate not only regarding the further development of both nations’ Eurofighter Typhoon fleets but also in the F-35 program. The latter is likely to have resulted in valuable knowledge transfer.

In a sense, unlike France, which is totally dependent on the success of the FCAS program as it does have to find out a replacement for the Rafale that will be technologically backward in a decade, neither Britain nor Italy, nor Sweden will be solely dependent on the success of the Tempest.

Their operational requirements are narrower, mainly because both the British and Italian F-35s already cover many mission profiles that would otherwise be complexity drivers.

Unlike France, Britain and Italy have not placed all their eggs in the basket of a single, overarching military aerospace project. This means that a possible failure of Tempest would be less problematic for them. Militarily, they will possess sizable F-35 fleets by the 2030s.

In other words, while for its partners, particularly for France, FCAS has a high political salience, and the project appears “too big to fail” for the involved nations, it is not the case with, say, Britain. And this flexibility gives Tempest partners a much better comfort level.

Just imagine if the FCAS fails, and France is compelled to buy US fighter aircraft for its defense – or even Tempest, it will be a terrible blow to French pride, particularly when their recent ties with the US have been marked by more hate than love.

Even it will be a blow for Germany, which is trying to strengthen “European” defense capabilities and revive “European power,” with US interests mainly diverted towards Indo-Pacific.

  • Author and veteran journalist Prakash Nanda has been commenting on politics, foreign policy on strategic affairs for nearly three decades. A former National Fellow of the Indian Council for Historical Research and recipient of the Seoul Peace Prize Scholarship, he is also a Distinguished Fellow at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. CONTACT: prakash.nanda@hotmail.com
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