From Wikipedia"
The Eurofighter Typhoon is a twin-engine, canard-delta wing, multirole combat aircraft, designed and built by a consortium of three companies: Alenia Aeronautica, BAE Systems, and EADS; working through a holding company, Eurofighter GmbH, which was formed in 1986. The project is managed by the NATO Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency, which acts as the prime customer.
 
The
 series production of the Eurofighter Typhoon is underway, and the  
aircraft is being procured under three separate contracts (named "tranches"), each for aircraft with generally improved capabilities. The aircraft has entered service with the Royal Air Force, the German Luftwaffe, the Italian Air Force, the Spanish Air Force, the Austrian Air Force and the Royal Saudi Air Force.
The financial burdens placed on Germany by reunification caused Helmut Kohl to make an election promise to cancel the Eurofighter. In early to mid-1991 German Defence Minister Volker Rühe
  sought to withdraw Germany from the project in favour of using  
Eurofighter technology in a cheaper, lighter plane. Due to the amount of
  money already spent on development, the number of jobs dependent on 
the  project, and the binding commitments on each partner government,  
Germany was unable to withdraw; "Rühe's predecessors had locked  
themselves into the project by a punitive penalty system of their own  
devising."
 
In
 1995 concerns over workshare appeared. Since the formation of  
Eurofighter the workshare split had been agreed at the 33/33/21/13  
(United Kingdom/Germany/Italy/Spain) based on the number of units being 
 ordered by each contributing nation. All the nations then reduced their
  orders. The UK cut its orders from 250 to 232, Germany from 250 to 
140,  Italy from 165 to 121 and Spain from 100 to 87.
  According to these order levels the workshare split should have been  
39/24/22/15 UK/Germany/Italy/Spain, Germany was unwilling to give up  
such a large amount of work.
  In January 1996, after much negotiation between UK and German 
partners,  a compromise was reached whereby Germany would purchase 
another 40  aircraft. The workshare split is now 43% for EADS MAS in Germany and Spain; 37.5% BAE Systems in the UK; and 19.5% for Alenia in Italy.
 The next major milestone came at the Farnborough Airshow
 in September 1996.  The UK announced the funding for the construction 
phase of the project.  In November 1996 Spain confirmed its order but 
Germany again delayed  its decision. After much diplomatic activity 
between the UK and Germany,  an interim funding arrangement of DM100 million (€51
 million)  was contributed by the German government in July 1997 to 
continue  flight trials. Further negotiation finally resulted in German 
approval  to purchase the Eurofighter in October 1997.
 






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