A German official informed reporters: “Germany and France have agreed to a final mediation effort between the industries, to be facilitated by experts. With the upcoming decisions on the federal budget, a resolution must be achieved by mid-April.”
FCAS, also involving Spain, aims to replace Germany’s Eurofighter and France’s Rafale jets by around 2040. The program encompasses a warplane — central to the dispute between the two defense giants — as well as drones and a combat cloud.
While German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is open to the idea of developing two separate planes, Macron opposes that option.
POLITICO previously reported that Macron met with Dassault CEO Eric Trappier and Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury last week to discuss the project. The matter was also addressed at a bilateral meeting between the French president and German chancellor on Wednesday.
Laura Kayali reported from Paris, and Giorgio Leali and Hans von der Burchard reported from Brussels.













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