VOOZH about

URL: https://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/15011554

⇱ Japan, Britain and Italy plan to place advanced jet fighter project HQ in U.K.--sources | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis


Skip to content

👁 The Asahi Shimbun | Asia & Japan Watch

Language

The Asahi Shimbun

>

Business

>

article

Japan, Britain and Italy plan to place advanced jet fighter project HQ in U.K.--sources

REUTERS

September 22, 2023 at 12:40 JST

👁 Photo/Illutration
A concept model of the Global Combat Air Program (GCAP) fighter jet is displayed at the DSEI Japan defense show at Makuhari Messe in Chiba, east of Tokyo, Japan March 15, 2023. (Reuters Photo)

Japan, Britain and Italy plan to choose Britain as the headquarters for their next-generation fighter program, four sources in Japan said, putting London at the forefront of a partnership that could expand to include other nations.

The three countries established the Global Combat Air Program (GCAP) in December after Britain and Japan agreed to merge their fighter efforts in a ground-breaking collaboration that aims to deploy an advanced aircraft by the middle of the next decade.

Japan and Britain will dominate design and manufacturing on the project, with London’s deeper and more recent experience in jet fighter development likely to give it a leading role in organizing the program, said three of the sources, who have knowledge of internal discussions.

“The headquarters will be in Britain, but for the sake of balance, someone from Japan could head it,” said one of the sources, all of whom asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

“Discussion about the headquarters is ongoing and we are unable to comment on the location,” Japan’s defense procurement agency said in an email. A development framework for the fighter would be established in the next fiscal year, it added.

“No final decisions have been made on the locations and we will not comment on speculation,” a spokesperson at Britain’s defense ministry said.

Officials at the Italian defense ministry were unavailable for comment. Reuters in March reported that Italy was set to pay for about a fifth of the overall development cost, which the country’s government dismissed as “speculative.”

OTHER COUNTRIES

On Friday, the head of Italian defense and aerospace group Leonardo said Saudi Arabia would not be a core partner in the project, after the Financial Times last month said it was pushing to join.

GCAP could welcome the country in a more limited role because it would bring money and a lucrative market to a project expected to cost tens of billions of dollars, the three sources said.

One of its neighbors in the Middle East, The United Arab Emirates, has also shown interest, they added. There had been conversations on possibilities with Saudi Arabia, but no decision beyond that, Richard Berthon, director of Future Combat Air at Britain’s Ministry of Defense, said at London’s DSEI arms show last week.

“It was made clear in London that it could possibly come in at a later date,” an Italian defense ministry source said, declining to be identified because they are not authorized to speak to the media.

Britain’s lead company in GCAP is BAE Systems PLC, with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries representing Japan.

European missile maker MBDA will also join the project, along with avionics manufacturer Mitsubishi Electric Corp., Britain’s Rolls-Royce PLC, Japan’s IHI Corp. and Italy’s Avio Aero will work on the engine.

Related News

  • 👁 Image

    Britain and Japan to pay for most of fighter project agreed with Italy--sources

    March 16, 2023
  • 👁 Image

    Britain and Japan aim to merge Tempest and F-X fighter programs--sources

    July 15, 2022
  • 👁 Image

    Japan, Britain, Italy moving forward on fighter jet project

    November 18, 2022
  • 👁 Image

    Japan worries it could miss out on leading project to develop new jets

    February 10, 2023
  • 👁 Image

    Britain announces funding for next stage of fighter project with Japan and Italy

    April 14, 2023
  • 👁 Image

    U.K., Japanese, Italian partners agree next steps for fighter jet

    September 13, 2023

Trending Now

  1. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    VOX POPULI: Redbeard’s musings still haunt Japan's sex work debate
  2. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Universities expand efforts to help foreign students adjust
  3. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Survey: 60% of foreign residents want to live in Saitama forever
  4. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Canada to join GCAP fighter jet program as an observer
  5. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Killer of clerk at Pokemon Center arrested earlier for stalking her
  6. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Japan eyes fund of 1 trillion yen for revival of shipbuilding
  7. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Upscale Tokyo chain picked to serve coffee in imperial gardens
  8. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Hisahito blends in at university with security in the background
  9. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    ANA, JAL to sharply increase fuel surcharges for flights abroad
  10. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Japan, France see eye to eye on rare earths, safe Hormuz passage
  1. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Killer of clerk at Pokemon Center arrested earlier for stalking her
  2. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Pokemon shop employee killed in Tokyo knife attack
  3. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    VOX POPULI: Redbeard’s musings still haunt Japan's sex work debate
  4. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Canada to join GCAP fighter jet program as an observer
  5. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Another railway crossing in Kamakura turns into tourist spot
  6. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Survey: 60% of foreign residents want to live in Saitama forever
  7. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    MPD: Mopeds sold under guise of power-assisted bicycles
  8. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Years of sakura diplomacy wilt after China snubs Japan
  9. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Japan to freeze visas for food service industry as quota nears
  10. 👁 Photo/Illutration
    Japan to toughen requirements for citizenship, skirt Diet approval
  • 👁 Image

    Summer updates: ANA to refit its long-haul flights with new seats

    March 31, 2026

  • 👁 Image

    Spring weather draws crowds to Tokyo’s famed sakura locations

    March 30, 2026

  • 👁 Image

    More historical sites reopening as luxury hotels to fund upkeep

    March 29, 2026

Recommended

Learning English

BACK TO TOP

Some articles on this website may contain content generated by artificial intelligence programs.

Copyright © The Asahi Shimbun Company. All rights reserved. No reproduction or republication without written permission.