Italy Invites Germany to Join GCAP Amid FCAS Tensions, Reshaping European Defense Collaboration

December 7, 2025
Italy Invites Germany to Join GCAP Amid FCAS Tensions, Reshaping European Defense Collaboration
  • Italy is signaling openness to Germany joining the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), a UK–Japan–Italy-led effort to field a sixth-generation fighter by around 2035, as Europe’s parallel FCAS project faces friction.

  • During a parliamentary hearing, Defence Minister Guido Crosetto noted multiple countries showing interest in GCAP, with Germany as a potential participant and inquiries coming from Australia, Saudi Arabia, and Canada.

  • Crosetto also said Germany could join GCAP in the future as Berlin weighs its position amid pressure to exit FCAS.

  • Franco-German disagreements over leadership, intellectual property, and work shares in FCAS are complicating the project, even as German business leaders push to keep FCAS moving.

  • Germany’s hesitations have raised warnings in parliament about delays and risks, outlining a strategic choice between pursuing NGWS/NGF within FCAS or seeking alternative paths.

  • FCAS, which includes Spain, faces internal frictions that could jeopardize its future, with a high-level meeting of German, French, and Spanish defense ministers slated for December 11 to decide its course.

  • Crosetto argued that broader participation would deliver investment critical mass, boost innovation, and reduce costs, highlighting GCAP’s economic and technical advantages.

  • German leaders have urged a timely FCAS resolution, with Merkel-era-style emphasis on distributing burdens and coordinating with Madrid.

  • Crosetto warned that wider participation could yield further economic and technical benefits, suggesting FCAP could still expand if conditions align.

  • Shifting Germany toward GCAP could reshape balance of power across GCAP and FCAS and influence Europe’s and the Indo-Pacific defense architecture.

  • France–Germany tensions over FCAS, a roughly €100 billion program to replace Rafale and Eurofighter by about 2040, include disputes over leadership and work share, with Germany eyeing alternatives with Airbus.

  • Germany is weighing options—stronger ties with Spain, closer alignment with Sweden via Saab, or greater alignment with the UK-led GCAP—though pursuing the UK option raises concerns due to BAE Systems’ involvement in Tempest.

  • Both FCAS and GCAP target a sixth-generation fighter for service entry around 2035, marking a pivotal decade of European defense collaboration.

  • Crosetto framed GCAP expansion as a path to enhanced industrial, technological, and financial viability, portraying Italy as a magnet for new collaborators.

  • GCAP is led by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, BAE Systems, and Leonardo, aiming for a stealth fighter integrated with drones and other systems, with equal cooperation among founding nations.

Summary based on 2 sources


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