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Sources claim that NATO is planning to replace AWACS jets with Saab GlobalEye aircraft

Four sources with knowledge of the matter have confirmed that NATO is planning to replace its aging AWACS fleet with GlobalEye aircraft from Sweden's Saab. This move could put President Donald Trump on edge.

Trump has repeatedly threatened NATO's dissolution, accusing European countries of a free ride by leaving it to the U.S.

Sources?said NATO would announce its GlobalEye plans at a meeting with its members on 7 and 8 July in the Turkish capital Ankara.

NATO has not responded to our request for comment. Saab declined to comment.

Since 1982, NATO has been able to keep an eye on the skies with its 14 Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) jets. These aircraft look like radar towers in flight thanks to their distinct nine-metre wide radomes.

The AWACS aircraft, based at the?Geilenkirchen Airbase in Germany has been extensively used by NATO for surveillance missions along NATO's eastern flank ever since Russia began its war in Ukraine.

Sources said that under the replacement plan the base could eventually be home to the largest fleet of GlobalEye spy jets in the world. The system was first flown in 2018 and is based on Bombardier's Global 6500 business aircraft.

GlobalEye competes with Boeing's E-7 Wedgetail early warning and control?aircraft based on the 737-800 jetliner, designed to oversee and guide battle.

NATO's initial plan to purchase six Boeing E-7 planes was abandoned in 2025 after the Pentagon, its largest customer, decided to abandon plans to buy 26 and instead rely on satellites.

Under pressure from U.S. Defense Secretary Pete 'Hegseth, however, told a Congressional committee?in may that the Pentagon was pushing to include the plane in the budget. (Reporting and editing by Barbara Lewis, Joe Bavier and Simon Johnson. Additional reporting by Sabine Siebold.

(source: Reuters)