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Macron: France and Germany continue to work together on the fighter jet project

Officials said that on Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron & German Chancellor Friedrich Merz?tasked? their respective defence ministries to continue working on?the controversial Franco-German FCAS Fighter Jet Project.

Plans to develop an 'futuristic air-combat system' with Spain are hanging by a thread due to a public disagreement over control between France Dassault Aviation, and Airbus which represents Germany and Spain on the 100 billion euro ($116.85billion) project.

Macron replied "No" when asked by a journalist if the FCAS was dead. The French 'president' said that he and Merz had discussed the matter on the sidelines of an EU summit in Cyprus. He said, "We had an excellent discussion with the chancellor this morning, and we gave a directive to our defence ministers to work on specific areas on a variety of different topics." "Not only the future combat aircraft but also various levers of?our countries' cooperation."

The German government's spokesperson confirmed that the two leaders had a discussion.

The Chancellor and President of the United States instructed their respective defense ministers to continue to work on different areas of cooperation, and to decide on next steps. The spokeswoman stated that this work would be completed within the next few weeks.

The German and French defence ministers offered different timelines on Wednesday for a final decision to be made about the fighter jet project. One said that the leaders of the two countries would make a quick decision, while the other stated that mediators wanted more time to discuss it.

The disagreement centres on?leadership?of plans to build a fleet of interconnected crewed aircraft and armed drones, under a 'common digital umbrella. Insiders expected Germany and France to abandon the development of a joint fighter jet, but continue their cooperation on drones, and the so-called 'digital backbone', which would allow data exchange between jets, drones, and other sensors, such as ground radar. Macron would face political difficulties if he retracted the plan.

(source: Reuters)