By Michael Sauerbier
In any case, the chancellor is not afraid of flying. Olaf Scholz (64, SPD) hovered in the government helicopter on Wednesday afternoon for the opening of the ILA Air Show. And inspected almost every military aircraft. Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck (52, Greens) did the opposite.
A military Airbus A400M droned low-level maneuvers while Scholz looked at the huge cargo hold of a parked example. And then the current and future Luftwaffe arsenal: Eurofighter, Eurodrone, NH90 helicopter.
Beaming hosts everywhere: the chancellor’s wallet is worth 100 billion euros. A third is spent on the nuclear-capable US F-35 fighter-bomber. Pilot Alberto Bosi from Italy’s Air Force Scholz enthusiastically described the feeling of flying.
The Chancellor’s message: “Security and sustainability.” In addition to alternative drives and fuels, Scholz announced the development of a European “next generation” fighter jet.
Habeck avoided the military show. The Green Economics Minister took a look at the CO2-free jets and planes from MTU and Airbus.
Habeck: “One major topic outshines all others: making air traffic climate-neutral. The ramp-up should happen by the 1930s.”