Index  ›  defence  ›  City PM
defence · City PM ↗

Germany and France close ranks on defence after jet project collapse

City PM Reviewed Jul 19, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Germany and France abandoned the joint Future Combat Air System (FCAS) fighter jet project last month due to disputes between Airbus and Dassault.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced that the Multinational Force for Ukraine would conduct exercises in countries neighbouring Ukraine in the coming months to validate deployment plans and demonstrate readiness.
French President Emmanuel Macron stated in early 2024 that Germany was one of eight countries that agreed to participate in a French-led nuclear deterrence project.
8 · countries participating in French-led nuclear deterrence project
A joint German–French statement after their Friday meeting committed to investigating an approach for the Main Ground Combat System (MGCS) to bring it to a proof-of-concept state.
Germany will participate in a French-initiated autumn manoeuvre as part of the Coalition of the Willing group of Ukraine's allies, with participation details to be clarified jointly.

Speaking alongside French President Emmanuel Macron at a press conference after a joint meeting of the two governments, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that this year would see German troops join a French military nuclear exercise.

"This is complementary to our nuclear participation and deterrence within NATO, which we still hold to," he said.

Macron said earlier this year that Germany was one of eight countries which had agreed to participate in a French-led nuclear deterrence project.

However he has stressed that France -- one of Western Europe's two nuclear powers alongside the United Kingdom -- will retain tight control over nuclear decision-making.

For Macron, there is an urgent need to make progress in this area before next spring's presidential election in which far-right leader Marine Le Pen is a frontrunner to be his successor.

The prospect of a Le Pen presidency adds yet more uncertainty for European countries already scrambling to boost defence capabilities in the face of the Russian threat and waning US commitment under President Donald Trump.

Merz also said Germany would take part in "a manoeuvre in the autumn held on the initiative of France" as part of the Coalition of the Willing group of Ukraine's allies.

"We will clarify together what form exactly this participation will take," he said.

At a meeting of the group on Monday, Macron said a Multinational Force for Ukraine, which would be deployed once the fighting ends, would hold exercises in the coming months in countries neighbouring Ukraine "to validate our deployment plans and demonstrate that we are ready".

Historic site
 On Friday morning, Merz welcomed Macron at the Noervenich air base near Cologne, with the two leaders emerging from a Super Puma helicopter -- itself a symbol of successful Franco-German cooperation.

They then led a joint defence and security council held next to a French Rafale jet and a Eurofighter, a key component of Germany's air force.

The full cabinets of both governments got together for talks in a castle near Cologne, where French president Charles de Gaulle and German chancellor Konrad Adenauer agreed on the idea of a friendship treaty between the two countries in 1962.

The two countries had been seeking to "bounce back" from last month's implosion of the joint Future Combat Air System (FCAS) fighter jet project, which fell victim to bickering between Airbus and France's Dassault.

There are also fears for another joint project, the Main Ground Combat System (MGCS), which aims to replace battle tanks used by France and Germany and has been buffeted by internal tensions since Germany's Rheinmetall entered the project.

A joint statement from the two countries after Friday's meeting said only that they wanted to "investigate an approach" for MGCS in order to "bring it to a proof-of-concept state".

The allies also pledged to cooperate on long-range missile capacity, air defence, satellite internet and early warning capabilities.

Asked about the prospect of a Le Pen victory in 2027's election, Merz said that Germany would "extend a hand" to whoever was elected.

"We will continue to do everything we can to ensure that this cooperation with our French neighbours remains as close, as deep and as trusting as possible," Merz said.

"That applies regardless of what voters in our two countries decide."

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) has also established a steady lead in German polls, although other parties have so far maintained a "firewall", preventing cooperation with the party.

Macron himself addressed the question of his successor and said that caution should be taken with regard to surveys predicting a Le Pen victory.

"Trust the French people, don't always predict the worst for them. Allow them to want the best."

This article was originally published by City PM ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error