Eric Trappier: ‘Airbus is not respecting the FCAS agreement, not Dassault’

Dassault Aviation CEO Eric Trappier used the company’s 2025 annual results briefing to reject allegations that Dassault is failing to meet its contractual commitments on the Future Combat Air System (FCAS), arguing instead that the program’s deadlock is fundamentally about governance and leadership of the New Generation Fighter (NGF) pillar.

Speaking as Dassault Aviation reported  and forecast further growth in 2026, Trappier said the accusations aimed at Dassault are “fake” and framed the dispute as an attempt to dilute the industrial leadership that partner governments have already assigned. 

Dispute on governance, not workshare

Trappier said FCAS was built on the understanding that France would lead the program and that Dassault would lead the NGF work, before Spain joined via Airbus Defence and Space. He said Dassault accepted a shift to a one-third share of the work when Spain entered, but that the core question has since become how decisions are made and who ultimately has authority over the fighter’s design tradeoffs, interfaces, and timelines.  

In his opinion, FCAS cannot be managed through what he derided as a “co-co-co” guidance model, a reference to a structure in which multiple industrial partners effectively co-lead decisions, slowing execution and blurring accountability. Trappier once again argued that a program of FCAS’s scale requires a “real leader,” and said that not only France, but also Germany and Spain, have designated Dassault as leader of the NGF pillar.

Trappier went further, accusing Airbus of not respecting the initial agreement, and said that if Airbus “does not want to work with us,” the project would be effectively dead.

According to Trappier, FCAS risks reproducing a governance model that yields compromised aircraft, slower decisions, and ultimately reduced confidence in European autonomy. 

Asked whether Dassault feared falling into irrelevancy, the CEO pointed out:

“Of the four countries that developed the Eurofighter, three bought the F-35. That’s what decline looks like.”

Paris insists operational requirements are aligned

Trappier’s remarks were made amid revived public debate in Germany over whether FCAS should split into separate national or semi-national fighter programs, in part because Berlin’s political leadership has argued that French and German operational requirements differ too much to sustain a single aircraft. 

Trappier refused to assess how likely a “two jets” outcome is, but said German political claims about divergent requirements do not match the French position that the requirements remain the same.