Japan signs pact to build stealth jet with UK and Italy in its first major military tie-up beyond US since WWII
For Japan, it marks the first time since World War II that it has looked beyond the US for a major military partnership, spurred partly by American reluctance to share technology.
Shapps met his Japanese and Italian counterparts, Minoru Kihara and Guido Crosetto, in Tokyo, and the deal the three nations signed is still subject to ratification by parliaments in the three nations.

“As we face the most complex security environment since World War II … securing aerial superiority continues to be a crucial challenge that we must achieve,” said Kihara.
As part of the agreement, the programme headquarters would be sited in Britain, with the first chief executive officer coming from Japan.
Fighters are among the most costly of defence projects with time-frames running to decades and budgets into hundreds of billions of dollars, so adding Japanese financial clout to European know-how honed on a succession of jets culminating in the Eurofighter represents a major step forward in developing the plane.

The new programme will include capabilities such as uncrewed aircraft, advanced sensors and cutting-edge weapons, with the three countries working to reach the development phase of the project in 2025, and have the warplane in service by 2035.
London-based BAE Systems Plc, Europe’s biggest defence company, and Italy’s Leonardo SpA – partners on the Eurofighter Typhoon and Tempest – will work with F-X lead contractor Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd to take the project forward.
Additional reporting by Reuters