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How the Iran War Is Changing European Defence Companies' Order Books Forever

2026-04-02| 1 min read| EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk
Story Focus

European defence company order books are expanding faster than at any point since the Cold War. Here is what this wave of military spending is actually buying and what it reveals.

European defence company order books are expanding faster than at any point since the Cold War. Here is what this wave of military spending is actually buying and what it reveals.

Key points
  • European defence company order books are expanding faster than at any point since the Cold War.
  • Rheinmetall, MBDA, Leonardo, BAE Systems, Saab, Thales — the leading European defence companies have all reported order backlogs in early 2026 that are multiple years of their current production capacity.
  • The Iran war has added a specific urgency to air defence orders that the general European rearmament trend had not previously produced.
Timeline
2026-04-02: Rheinmetall, MBDA, Leonardo, BAE Systems, Saab, Thales — the leading European defence companies have all reported order backlogs in early 2026 that are multiple years of their current production capacity.
Current context: The Iran war has added a specific urgency to air defence orders that the general European rearmament trend had not previously produced.
What to watch: For European defence industry as a whole, the current order wave is the transformation event that converts what were primarily niche, domestically-oriented manufacturers into globally competitive defence industrial compa...
Why it matters

European defence company order books are expanding faster than at any point since the Cold War.

Rheinmetall, MBDA, Leonardo, BAE Systems, Saab, Thales — the leading European defence companies have all reported order backlogs in early 2026 that are multiple years of their current production capacity. This is not primarily a paper exercise; it represents genuine commitments from governments that have authorised specific defence purchases and committed specific budget lines to pay for them.

The Iran war has added a specific urgency to air defence orders that the general European rearmament trend had not previously produced. The demonstration that an adversary's missile forces can reach targets from great distances, conduct sustained campaigns against defended areas, and impose economic and psychological costs even when partially intercepted has provided every European defence ministry with a live operational argument for expanding air defence capacity.

MBDA — the Franco-Italian-British-Spanish-German company that produces the CAMM, Aster, and Meteor systems that form the backbone of European air defence — reports order commitments that are fully booked through 2030 and are receiving enquiries for 2031-35 delivery. The production expansion required to meet this demand requires manufacturing facility investment, workforce training, and supply chain development that takes 18-36 months from commitment to production capacity.

Rheinmetall's specific position in the European defence boom is distinctive. Its combination of artillery ammunition production (most urgently needed for Ukraine), armoured vehicle systems (needed for all European NATO members' modernisation programmes), and air defence components (needed in the current crisis) makes it simultaneously exposed to demand across every category of the European rearmament.

For European defence industry as a whole, the current order wave is the transformation event that converts what were primarily niche, domestically-oriented manufacturers into globally competitive defence industrial companies. The companies that execute this transformation — managing quality, delivery, and technology simultaneously at rapidly expanding scale — will emerge as European strategic assets of the first order.

#defence#companies#europe#orders#iran-war#rheinmetall

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