Airbus CEO tells Germany to reform arms policy for good of Europe

Reuters  |  MUNICH 

By Andreas Rinke

By showing "a kind of moral superelevation" on arms exports, was frustrating Britain, and Spain, Enders told Reuters, adding that without a common European approach could consider manufacturing German-free products.

German restrictions on arms exports to non-EU or NATO countries have been a thorn in bilateral co-operation for years because of the historical objections of the Social Democrats, junior partners in Angela Merkel's ruling coalition.

can stop exports of arms that include parts made in under existing arrangements.

"Yes, the French and Germans are apparently talking about it and trying to find a new regulation ... But at the moment there are no results," Enders told in an interview.

"It has been driving us crazy at for years that when there is even just a tiny German part involved in, for example, helicopters the German side gives itself the right to, for example, block the sale of a French helicopter," he added.

Much to France's irritation, Germany decided unilaterally last October - following the assassination of Saudi in - to suspend arms sales to Saudi Arabia, its second largest market in the world after

That decision has blocked the export licence for the sale of long-range air-to-air missile, which is supposed to equip the Saudi Air Force Eurofigher Typhoon.

is assembled by European leader MBDA, a subsidiary of Airbus, and Leonardo, while its propulsion system and its warheads are manufactured in Germany.

A future warplane system launched this week by and and a plan for a tank of the future could also be compromised if does not adapt its policies, French diplomatic and military sources warned.

German called on Thursday for a common European arms export policy, telling the Munich Security Conference:

"We Germans should not pretend that we are more moral than or more politically far-sighted than Great Britain in terms of human rights policy."

A said on Friday that the two countries had exchanged letters on the subject as was normal procedure, but that work was still ongoing.

"On the fundamentals on both sides we've expressed our desire to resolve this problem. The work is still ahead of us," the French said.

Enders said Germany needed to secure common arms regulations if it wanted to push ahead with plans for a European defence policy.

"It is to some degree a litmus test as to how serious the Germans are about common defence and close Franco-German cooperation," he said.

(Additional reporting by and Tanya Wood; Writing by Paul Carrel; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, February 16 2019. 12:39 IST