Europe’s defense industry is set to reap a $50 billion
windfall as the Nov. 13 terrorist attacks on Paris prompt governments to ramp
up spending on military capabilities spanning cyber security to fighter jets,
armored vehicles and drones in an effort to defeat Islamic State.
France, where Dassault Aviation SA’s Rafale fighter jet is
made, has halted plans to cut almost 10,000 military personnel, while Germany
will spend an extra 8 billion euros ($8.5 billion) on defense and Britain has
earmarked a further 12 billion pounds ($18 billion), benefiting companies
including BAE Systems Plc. Italy said Tuesday it would devote 1 billion euros
more to security, after the draft budget called for 2 billion euros of
reductions.
European governments are rethinking their defense policies
after years of cuts tied to the draw down in Afghanistan and Iraq and austerity
programs imposed after the global slump. The spending commitments will swell
budgets that had already begun to revive amid heightened tensions with Russia
following last year’s annexation of Crimea, with Britain committing in August
to spending 2 percent of GDP on defense.
“Over the 2015-2019 period, an extra $50 billion will be
added to Western European defense spending as a result of changes implemented
this year,” said Fenella McGerty, senior analyst for defense budgets at IHS
Jane’s. There’ll be an $11 billion annual uplift by the end of the period, she
said, driven by adjustments in France, Germany and the U.K. that began with the
Jan. 7 assault on the Paris offices of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
Cameron confirmed in Monday’s defense statement that Royal
Air Force Eurofighters, built by BAE, will get enhanced ground-attack
capability, allowing them to play a more active role, and a 10-year life
extension that will effectively create two extra squadrons.
F-35 Acceleration
Britain will also take all 138 Lockheed Martin Corp. F-35
fighters initially ordered and triple the pace of deliveries to 2023, allowing
deployment of two new aircraft carriers with a full roster of planes. BAE is an
F-35 partner and Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc helps make the engines, as it does on
Eurofighter.
Cameron also reiterated a commitment to an Anglo-French
venture for the development of military drones. Under an agreement signed last
year, BAE and Rolls-Royce are working with France’s Dassault, Selex ES Ltd.,
Thales SA and Safran SA on a model along the lines of General Atomics
Aeronautical Systems Inc.’s Predator. Thales also has a 25 percent stake in the
Rafale.
Airbus Group SE will offer surveillance and reconnaissance
upgrades to its A400M military transport and A330 airborne tanker models,
providing operators with a “cheap and simple” option for boosting intelligence
gathering, according to Fernando Alonso, head of its military aircraft arm.
Germany’s Defense Ministry said in June it would purchase
the proposed European-led air-defense system known as MEADS and opened bids for
a new multi-purpose combat ships as part of a force modernization. Asymmetric
military campaigns would require smaller caliber ammunition, with shares of
German armaments specialist Rheinmetall AG up more than 8 percent since the
Paris attacks. Sweden’s Saab AB won an order Tuesday to supply hand-held
rocket-launchers to the Austrian armed forces starting next year.
Britain will devote 1.9 billion pounds over five years to
countering Islamic State’s use of the Internet for planning, propaganda and
online attacks, creating a specialist task force to track its communications. Shares
of Qinetiq Group Plc rose 10 percent Nov. 19 after the former U.K.
defense-research laboratory said it was experiencing higher demand for cyber,
surveillance and security sensors. U.S. companies also stand to benefit from
Europe’s rearmament, with two of three major new spending commitments announced
by Cameron involving trans-Atlantic deals. Boeing Co. won a contract for nine
P8 torpedo-fitted maritime patrol aircraft, and 600 Scout armored vehicles
built by General Dynamics Corp. will form the core of new “Strike Brigades” due
by 2025.
Somehow that 'peace dividend' never quite gets round to arriving, does it?...
Somehow that 'peace dividend' never quite gets round to arriving, does it?...
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