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Sources say that despite ministerial discussions, there is still no agreement on European fighter aircrafts

After inconclusive discussions in Berlin, the defence ministers of Germany, France, and Spain pushed discussions about a troubled European Fighter Jets Project to a meeting with government leaders next week.

Boris Pistorius, of Germany, Catherine Vautrin of France and Margarita Robles of Spain met on Thursday in Berlin to discuss the fate FCAS Project whose future is in doubt due to industrial disputes.

Airbus, a German-and-Spanish-backed company, and Dassault Aviation of France are at odds with each other over issues such as technology and industrial control. These disagreements threaten to sabotage the 100 billion-euro project for renewing air power by 2040.

Three sources said that no decision was made at the Berlin Ministerial Talks, which were held just a few weeks before the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's deadline for a final decision by the end of the year.

A spokesperson for the German Defence Ministry said that "we are still in confidential discussions here." A spokesperson for the German?defence ministry said that they were still in confidential talks.

The next phase of this project involves increasing spending on a flying demonstration aircraft.

The French government's spokesperson stated that the "Berlin meeting" was a working session which allowed us to "reaffirm our commitment to continuing joint work on SCAF".

The push for progress follows increasing pressure to save the Future Combat Air System, or SCAF in French. It was launched over eight years ago and stalled because of industrial rivalries.

Merz and French president Emmanuel Macron will?likely seek a solution when they meet in the next?week. They'll also be attending a meeting with leaders of the European Union on December 17-19.

On Tuesday, a senior German legislator suggested that a focus on data networks, also known as "Combat Cloud", along with unmanned systems, could save the project. Each country would then concentrate on their own core fighter jets under a single umbrella. (Reporting and editing by Ros Russell, Sabine Siebold Christian Kraemer John Irish Tim Hepher)

(source: Reuters)