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Paris Report

Familiar show, only quieter

Written by Raymon J. Kaduck and Ken Pole   
Familiar show, only quieter
185-parisTHE HYPE surrounding this year’s Paris Air Show was largely about who would not be there. The Pentagon persuaded its defence contractors to withdraw or reduce their presence to punish the Elysée Palace for its obstructionism over the Iraq war. In a sense, the transatlantic bunfight gave US manufacturers a convenient excuse to scale down, which is just being rational in the current aerospace downturn. The change may be permanent, however, with the US military concentrating on only two shows – Farnborough and the Singapore Asian Aerospace event.

One US player that remained in the game was Lockheed Martin. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program is a microcosm of the changing landscape of military aerospace, because it does not map onto existing commercial or political structures. Tom Burbage, executive vice-president and program manager explained: “Not all partners are NATO (Australia), not all partners were part of the coalition of the willing (Canada) and not all partners are members of the EU, but several are. Five of the partners are part of the F-16 user community, and two of the partners are Eurofighter partner countries (Italy, UK).”