In Japan, a more muted cheering for the British-led GCAP warplane

MANILA, Philippines — Japan and British defense ministers met last week to discuss an ongoing joint fighter jet development program with Italy and to unveil the trinational headquarters for the project in Reading, 36 miles west of London.

Japan defense minister Gen Nakatani’s U.K. itinerary includes a meeting with Secretary of State for Defense John Healy on the Global Combat Air Programme and a visit to the headquarters of the GCAP International Government Organization (GIGO), the international body tasked with overseeing its development, production, and future exports.

“Today, Minister Nakatani and I have highlighted the positive progress being made on our important next-generation fighter jet program, to strengthen our security cooperation,” Healy was quoted as saying in a press release.

Partners are developing the fighter jets to enter service in 2035 while incurring less costs. The timeframe is crucial for Japan which will start retiring around 100 F-2s in the same year.

The three countries are expected to hammer out the finer details in Reading, including work, cost, and revenue sharing; proprietary information and technology transfers; and the involvement of third countries like Saudi Arabia.

“All three countries and all the people want to have more work share and profit, but they will minimize the financial responsibility as well,” says Sadamasa Oue, consulting senior fellow of the Asia Pacific Initiative of the International House of Japan, a Tokyo-based think tank. Oue is a retired lieutenant general of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force.

“This is going to be a very difficult negotiation,” Oue tells Defense News.

In Britain, GCAP is a popular, widely reported multinational initiative. Groups waited with bated breath when Prime Minister Keir Starmer took office and heaved a collective sigh of relief when he approved the program.

While experts scrutinized the U.K.’s two billion pounds ($2.4 billion) allocation for initial research and scoping, GCAP partners drummed up attention when they unveiled the fighter jet’s concept model at the Farnborough Airshow near London in July.

And British officials in a comprehensive report last week reiterated a need to rein in finances and “break the mould” of previous programs, which saw decades-long delays, development hurdles, and massive cost overruns. They also called for annual allocations to sustain British engagement.

In contrast, there is “GCAP silence” in Japan, says James Angelus, President of the International Security Industry Council, a Tokyo-based group devoted to connecting Western and Japanese defense firms. Last year, they wanted to raise awareness of the fighter jets, which the public knew little or nothing about. This attempt, Angelus says, met objections.(DEFENENEWS)

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