http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE66 ... %20News%29" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Grizzly? Not likely, RAF tells A400M bosses
Credit: Reuters/Kieran Doherty
FARNBOROUGH | Wed Jul 21, 2010 9:02pm BST
FARNBOROUGH England (Reuters) - The Royal Air Force is definitely not amused by the nickname provided by Airbus for its A400M military transporter -- the "Grizzly."
The European planemaker held a baptism ceremony for the bulky troop transporter at the Farnborough Airshow this week, using the moniker invented by the plane's test pilots.
Paw prints were painted over the grounds in a marketing stunt to introduce the "Grizzly" to the global defence industry.
But Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton, Britain's top air force officer, delivered a blunt veto from the RAF.
"It's absolutely appalling," he told Reuters.
"It has no provenance, no acceptance and it will enter RAF service with that name over my dead body."
The naming row risks embarrassment for Airbus, which has spent months fending off controversy over delays and billions of euros of cost overruns on Europe's largest defence project.
"The name is only for the prototype aircraft. The nations are free to select whatever name they wish," said Airbus Military spokesman Jaime Perez-Guerra.
Finding agreement on names for pan-European military hardware projects is a notoriously tricky diplomatic exercise.
Britain was accused of being insensitive in the 1990s when it decided to name the four-nation Eurofighter combat jet after an aircraft which bombed Germany in World War II, the Typhoon.
Dalton said Britain had its own proposed name for the A400M, but this would be discussed first with its partners in the project: France, Germany, Spain, Turkey, Belgium and Luxembourg.
Britain has ordered 25 A400Ms, but is expected to cancel three of them as part of a deal to help absorb cost overruns.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Jon Boyle)