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Ex-CEO Enders says need to leapfrog traditional arms
projects
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Sees need in next 3-5 years for battle robots including
drones
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Says Europe faces opposition on two fronts from Russia and
US
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Sees more private money flowing into European defence
By Tim Hepher
PARIS, March 13 (Reuters) - The former head of Airbus
has urged Europe to shift attention for now from major arms
projects to nimble new technologies like robotic drones to
demonstrate to Moscow and Washington that it can make a
difference to its security by the end of the decade.
Former CEO Tom Enders, who led Europe's top aerospace group
through some of its biggest funding battles, said planned new
warplanes would play a key role in coming decades but that the
immediate lessons from Ukraine required greater agility.
"We are told...that there is maybe a window of three to five
years before Putin might test (NATO) Article 5 in the Baltic
States or elsewhere. So we have a certain time pressure," Enders
told Reuters in a rare interview since leaving Airbus in 2019.
"We want to deter the enemy but what can we do to strengthen
that in three to five years? It is certainly not by the FCAS
(fighter) programme, not by developing a new Franco-German tank.
That all comes too late. We need to reactivate or increase
existing production lines and we need to introduce these new
intelligent systems as the Ukraine war has been teaching us."
He added: "First and foremost, we need to really maximize
the value of robots on the battlefield, particularly drones."
The Future Combat Air System (FCAS), also known by its
French abbreviation SCAF, is an effort by France, Germany and
Spain to replace Rafale and Eurofighter jets in the 2040s, with
Airbus and Dassault Aviation heading the work.
The war in Ukraine has been characterised by unprecedented
deployments of thousands of drones, helping Kyiv to temper the
numerical advantage of Russian forces that invaded in 2022 and
giving a sharp boost to the country's own defence industry.
"It's happening right now...on the Ukrainian battlefield.
You can leapfrog these old systems if you focus on autonomous
systems, robots, sensors and particularly drones," Enders said.
EAST AND WEST
Enders, who heads the German Council on Foreign Relations
and is widely seen as a prominent Atlanticist in business, said
the rift between Europe and Washington was the most serious
since NATO was born in 1949 and should be a final wake-up call.
"The U.S. voting with China and Russia against its long-term
allies in the UN Security Council: what else does it take?"
He said Europe had been wrong to consider Donald Trump's
first presidency as an "aberration" in the long-standing
transatlantic relationship, and that instead Joe Biden's single
term seemed the exception to a shift of focus away from Europe.
"Now we're facing a world where we have opponents as
Europeans on two fronts in the East and in the West, and God
knows how to classify China in this," Enders said.
Enders said the European defence industry would in future be
a mix between the big platform makers and risk-taking newcomers.
His comments contrast with calls by some politicians to give
more impetus to existing flagship projects like SCAF in response
to the prospect that Washington will cancel security guarantees.
The former Airbus CEO, who is also a board member of German
technology startup Helsing, has co-authored a white paper
calling for an immediate push into cutting-edge technology like
robotics, AI and hypersonics, to be developed within Europe.
Signatories to the 3-5 year view also include current Airbus
Chairman Rene Obermann, taking part in a personal capacity.
Enders said more money was now flowing into defence from the
private sector after years in which many of Europe's banks and
funds had shied away from defence for ethical investing reasons.
"Even big banks are now interested in investing in defence
and that is necessary to speed up the effectiveness of our armed
forces and our deterrence. I'm taking these three to five years
very seriously. In this crazy world, anything can happen."