In a blow that has sent shockwaves through the chancelleries of Europe (and caused several French defence ministers to choke on their croissants), the much-vaunted Franco-German fighter jet project has been unceremoniously dumped into the dustbin of history. Yes, dear reader, the Future Combat Air System, or FCAS as it was acronymically known, has been pronounced dead on arrival, leaving the United Kingdom’s own Tempest programme as the continent’s last, best, and frankly only hope for a sovereign fighter jet that doesn’t come with a side order of American strings attached.
Let us pause for a moment to savour the irony. For years, we were told that European cooperation was the only way forward, that bilateral projects were the future of defence procurement, and that the British were stubborn, insular, and frankly a bit weird for ploughing our own furrow. Now, as the Franco-German dream turns into a pumpkin, the Tempest stands alone: a gleaming, angular, radar-evading monument to British exceptionalism, or possibly just our refusal to play nicely with others.
The death knell for FCAS was sounded by a familiar chorus: cost overruns, technological disagreements, and the kind of bureaucratic infighting that would make a Brussels civil servant blush. France wanted to lead, Germany wanted a say, and somewhere in the middle, the whole thing collapsed under the weight of its own pretensions. Meanwhile, the Tempest programme chugs along, funded by a government that seems to have an almost religious belief in the power of screamingly expensive fighter jets to keep the nation safe from… well, from whatever it is that fighter jets are supposed to protect us from. Probably the Chinese, or the Russians, or perhaps just the shame of being caught without a decent air force.
But let us not get too misty-eyed. The Tempest is a magnificent piece of engineering, no doubt. It promises to be faster, stealthier, and more intelligent than anything that has come before. It will be equipped with artificial intelligence, directed energy weapons, and a cockpit so advanced that pilots will barely need to do anything except sit back and enjoy the ride. In other words, it is the perfect symbol of our times: a hugely expensive, technologically dazzling, and utterly unaffordable vanity project that will keep a few thousand engineers in jobs and a few hundred politicians in smug self-satisfaction.
And yet, there is something strangely uplifting about this news. In a world of ever-increasing globalisation, where our destinies are supposedly intertwined with those of our European neighbours, the Tempest represents a defiant refusal to be subsumed into a bland, supranational consensus. It is a fighter jet built for a nation that still believes it has a special role to play in the world, even if that role is largely limited to flying around in circles over the North Sea. True, it will cost a staggering amount of money, and true, it will probably be obsolete by the time it enters service in 2035, but by God, it will be British.
So raise a glass of airport gin (the only kind worth drinking) to the Tempest. May it fly long and high, scattering rival air forces like leaves before the wind. And may it never, ever have to share its hangar with a French jet. That would be too much to bear.









