The obvious question of course is why it will have taken nearly four years to reach this point. Those missiles could already be rolling off the production line had German decisionmakers acted decisively in 2022/2023. 3/3
The obvious question of course is why it will have taken nearly four years to reach this point. Those missiles could already be rolling off the production line had German decisionmakers acted decisively in 2022/2023. 3/3
The question remains, which aircraft will launch them. Tornado going out of service, Typhoon not certified yet and F-35 rather unlikely to happen. Certification of Typhoon seems to be the only logic option.
Scholzing around
To add: It all depends, of course, on when MBDA Germany, Saab, and their subcontractors can deliver, but I assume deliveries would not begin before 2029. This means that unless production capacity exceeds 200 units per year, the order would likely not be completed before 2035. 4/5
Previous Taurus production capacity was likely around 50 to 100 units annually, so a substantial increase beyond the earlier maximum would be necessary. 5/5
This is abysmally slow. Europeans might as well start taking Russian lessons right now.
Oi, unfortunately, I don't think the former chancellor was the right man for the job at that time.
Also concerning that Eurofighter still not certified and adapted for carrying Taurus. That would have been achieved within three months in Ukraine. If I remember correctly, a ground-launch capability was envisioned early in the program - why hasn't that idea been revisited?