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{{Short description|European defense manufacturer}}
'''Matra BAe Dynamics''' was formed in August [[1996 in aviation|1996]] by merger of half the missile business of [[Matra Defense]] of [[France]] and [[BAe Dynamics]] (a division of [[British Aerospace]]) of the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and was Europe's largest manufacturer of missiles and [[UAV]]s.
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2017}}
'''Matra BAe Dynamics''' was formed in August [[1996 in aviation|1996]] by merger of half the missile business of [[Matra Defense]] of [[France]] and [[BAe Dynamics]] (a division of [[British Aerospace]]) of the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and was Europe's largest manufacturer of missiles and [[Unmanned aerial vehicle|UAV]]s.


British Aerospace had previously sought to merge its missile business with [[Thomson-CSF]], the companies announced their plan to create a new combined company called '''Eurodynamics''' in 1989. However after more than a year of monopoly investigations the deal collapsed.<ref>{{cite news | first = David | last = White | coauthors =Betts, Paul | title = Missiles industry locks on new course: The move to joint ventures in Europe's arms sector | work = Financial Times | publisher = The Financial Times Limited | page = 19 | date = 1993-05-05 | accessdate = 2006-12-02}}</ref>
British Aerospace had previously sought to merge its missile business with [[Thomson-CSF]], the companies announced their plan to create a new combined company called '''Eurodynamics''' in 1989. However, after more than a year of monopoly investigations the deal collapsed.<ref>{{cite news | first = David | last = White |author2=Betts, Paul | title = Missiles industry locks on new course: The move to joint ventures in Europe's arms sector | work = Financial Times | publisher = The Financial Times Limited | page = 19 | date = 1993-05-05 }}</ref>


The formation of Matra BAe Dynamics was followed in [[1997 in aviation|1997]] by the acquisition of a 30% share of [[LFK]], an [[EADS]] susbsidary. In 2002 Matra BAe Dynamics joined [[Aerospatiale Matra|Aerospatiale Matra Missiles]] (the other half of Matra's missile business) and [[Alenia Marconi Systems]] (missile division only) to form [[MBDA]].
The formation of Matra BAe Dynamics was followed in [[1997 in aviation|1997]] by the acquisition of a 30% share of [[MBDA Deutschland GmbH|LFK]], an [[Airbus]] subsidiary. In 2002 Matra BAe Dynamics joined [[Aerospatiale Matra|Aerospatiale Matra Missiles]] (the other half of Matra's missile business) and [[Alenia Marconi Systems]] (missile division only) to form [[MBDA]].


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Aerospace companies of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:BAE Systems subsidiaries and divisions]]
[[Category:Defence companies of France]]
[[Category:Defence companies of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:France–United Kingdom military relations]]
[[Category:Guided missile manufacturers]]
[[Category:Manufacturing companies established in 1996]]
[[Category:Matra]]
[[Category:Multinational joint-venture companies]]
[[Category:1996 establishments in France]]
[[Category:British companies established in 1996]]


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[[Category:Companies of France]]
[[Category:Aerospace companies of the United Kingdom]]

Latest revision as of 23:30, 3 June 2023

Matra BAe Dynamics was formed in August 1996 by merger of half the missile business of Matra Defense of France and BAe Dynamics (a division of British Aerospace) of the UK and was Europe's largest manufacturer of missiles and UAVs.

British Aerospace had previously sought to merge its missile business with Thomson-CSF, the companies announced their plan to create a new combined company called Eurodynamics in 1989. However, after more than a year of monopoly investigations the deal collapsed.[1]

The formation of Matra BAe Dynamics was followed in 1997 by the acquisition of a 30% share of LFK, an Airbus subsidiary. In 2002 Matra BAe Dynamics joined Aerospatiale Matra Missiles (the other half of Matra's missile business) and Alenia Marconi Systems (missile division only) to form MBDA.

References[edit]

  1. ^ White, David; Betts, Paul (5 May 1993). "Missiles industry locks on new course: The move to joint ventures in Europe's arms sector". Financial Times. The Financial Times Limited. p. 19.