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France, Germany continue to work on fighter jet project, Macron says

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French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Friday tasked their defence ministries with continuing to work on the contentious Franco-German FCAS fighter jet ​project

NICOSIA (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Friday tasked their defence ministries with continuing to work on the contentious Franco-German FCAS fighter jet ​project, officials said.

Plans to develop a futuristic air combat system together with ‌Spain have been hanging by a thread amid a public dispute over control between France's Dassault Aviation and Airbus, which represents Germany and Spain in the 100 billion euro ($116.85 billion) project.

"No, not ​at all," Macron said when asked by a reporter if the FCAS ​project was dead. The French president said he had just discussed ⁠the issue with Merz on the margins of a summit of EU leaders in ​Cyprus.

"We had a good discussion this morning with the chancellor, and we gave a ​mandate to our defence ministries to work precisely on several areas, on a range of different issues," he said. "Not just the future combat aircraft, but various levers of cooperation between our two countries."

A ​German government spokeswoman confirmed the discussion between the two leaders.

"The Chancellor and the ​President instructed their defence ministers to continue working on various areas of cooperation and to agree on ‌the ⁠next steps. This work will be completed in the coming weeks," the spokeswoman said.

On Wednesday, Germany and France's defence ministers had offered differing timelines for a decision on the fighter jet project, with one saying the two countries' leaders would decide soon ​and the other saying ​mediators had sought ⁠more time to discuss the matter.

The dispute centres on leadership of the core fighter element of plans to build an interconnected ​fleet of crewed planes and armed drones under a common digital ​umbrella.

Insiders have ⁠been expecting Germany and France to abandon development of the joint fighter jet but continue cooperation on drones and the so-called combat cloud, or digital backbone, which would enable data ⁠exchange ​between jets, drones and other sensors such as ground ​radar. But rowing back the plan would be politically awkward for Macron.

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