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    HomeAmericaExclusive-Germany seeks more F-35 jets as European fighter program falters, sources say

    Exclusive-Germany seeks more F-35 jets as European fighter program falters, sources say

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    By Sabine Siebold and Mike ‌Stone

    BERLIN/WASHINGTON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Germany is considering ordering more U.S.-made F-35 fighter jets, ​two sources told Reuters, a move that would deepen Berlin's reliance on American military technology as its joint next-generation fighter program ⁠with France falters.

    One source said Berlin was in talks that could lead to the purchase of more than 35 additional jets. A second source did not specify the number. Both sources cautioned the outcome ​was still uncertain.

    In 2022, Germany purchased 35 of the aircraft, which are due to begin delivery later this year.

    The potential acquisition ‌of more Lockheed Martin stealth fighters, at a cost of more than $80 million each, comes as Germany and France are deadlocked on their Future Combat Air System (FCAS) program.

    The 100-billion-euro-project, launched in 2017 to replace France's ⁠Rafales and Eurofighters from 2040, has been stalled by industrial rivalries.

    Insiders expect Germany and ⁠France to abandon the development of a joint fighter jet but continue cooperation on drones and the so-called combat cloud, the digital backbone linking manned and unmanned platforms within the FCAS system.

    Purchasing more F-35 jets would buy Germany time to figure out a solution for the development of a sixth-generation fighter jet and ‌finding a partner for such a project.

    Germany's Defence Ministry did not immediately comment while a Pentagon spokesperson ⁠referred questions to Germany.

    A spokesperson for defence contractor Lockheed Martin said ‌the company was focused on building F-35s already ordered by Germany.

    Expansion of ​Germany's F-35 fleet would mark a significant strategic shift toward deeper military integration with the United States and away from European defence autonomy, a priority for fellow European Union member France.

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz ‌questioned on Wednesday whether developing a manned sixth-generation jet, as FCAS has ​sought to do, still made sense for ⁠his country's air force.

    "Will we still need a manned fighter jet in 20 years' ‌time? Do we still need it, given that we ⁠will have to develop it at great expense?" Merz said on the Machtwechsel podcast published on Wednesday.

    The F-35 aircraft will succeed the Tornado jets in their role of carrying U.S. nuclear bombs stored in Germany ​in the event of a ‌conflict.

    The F-35 is the only Western fighter jet certified to carry the most modern B61 nuclear bombs.

    German Defence ⁠Minister Boris Pistorius said last week the fate of ​FCAS would become clear within days.

    (Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington and Sabine Siebold in ​Berlin; Editing by Chris Sanders and Cynthia Osterman)

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