Monday, February 23, 2026
More
    HomeAmericaUS ambassador urges Portugal to buy F-35s, join top-tier air forces

    US ambassador urges Portugal to buy F-35s, join top-tier air forces

    -

    By Sergio Goncalves

    LISBON, Feb 23 (Reuters) - ‌The U.S. ambassador to Portugal has urged Lisbon to replace ​its ageing F-16 fighter jets with Lockheed Martin's F-35, saying the stealth jet would ensure interoperability with ⁠Europe's top-tier air forces.

    Ambassador John Arrigo told CNN Portugal late on Sunday that he aimed to draw on his business experience to help Portugal ramp up defence ​spending to NATO's target of 5% of gross domestic product by 2035 from the current 2%.

    "F-35 is ‌the best fighter - it's a fifth-generation stealth fighter, it'll get them (the Portuguese Air Force) into the Champions League when it comes to the EU," Arrigo said.

    Portuguese Defence Minister Nuno Melo ⁠said in November that the selection process for the replacement fighters ⁠had not yet started. 

    Arrigo said more than 900 of the F-35s were in service or on order across Europe and that for "interoperability, the F-35 is definitely the way to go," noting also that 25% of the plane was made with European parts.

    On relations ‌with China, the ambassador said the Trump administration was not pushing Portugal to choose ⁠between Washington and Beijing or decouple from China, The ‌U.S. was promoting "de-risking", he said, ensuring cybersecurity and investment ​screening. 

    Chinese companies expanded in Portugal following the 2011-14 bailout, when lower asset prices attracted foreign investors.

    Portugal secured a 78 billion euro bailout in May 2011 from the EU, ‌IMF and ECB after soaring borrowing costs during the eurozone ​debt crisis cut it off ⁠from markets, but had to agree to harsh austerity that sparked a ‌deep recession.

    China Three Gorges holds 21.4% of ⁠utility EDP, China State Grid owns 25% of grid operator REN, and Hong Kong‑listed Fosun controls 20% of bank Millennium BCP and 85% of insurer Fidelidade.

    Arrigo said the U.S. ​sees itself as Portugal's "best partner ‌but wants to keep any adversary... at arm's length."

    Portugal joined China's Belt and Road Initiative ⁠in December 2018. Arrigo said Lisbon's partnership ​with the U.S. would "flourish" if Lisbon exited, as Italy did in 2023.

    (Reporting by ​Sergio Goncalves; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM1M0A2-VIEWIMAGE

    Author

    Stay Connected

    1,800FansLike
    259FollowersFollow
    122FollowersFollow
    1,263FollowersFollow
    90,000SubscribersSubscribe

    Related articles

    Latest posts

    Share on Social Media

    spot_img