THE turbulent ride that the £35billion Eurofighter project has been through looks like coming to an end tomorrow when the German Cabinet is expected to bankroll the jet.

The real crunch comes in September when the German parliament votes on that deal, but, hopefully, the threat to the plane's future, on which 40,000 jobs in Britain alone depend, is over at last.

At stake is Europe's industrial future.

Eurofighter is an anchor for skills and technological development that will keep thousands of companies competitive and their employees in work.

All that benefit would fast drain to America if Eurofighter does not fly.

Germany might not like the cost today, but now it has wisely looked at the greater cost tomorrow of failing to back the plane.

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